THE MAROONFriday, May 9, 1969Flacks RemembersDetails Of AttackStudentCouncils ProtestHum Students' CouncilRefuses To CooperateWith Wegener's PlanTo protest the “unsatisfactory” methodin which the newly formed Wegener com¬mittee to reconsider discipline plans tochoose its three student members, at leastUC Is Sued ByEx-EmployeeThe University is being sued for $1.2 mil¬lion by Henry J. Duffels, a former employ¬ee of Argonne National Laboritories with alung disease.Duffles whose job at Argonne was tocreate beryllium billets by melting ber¬yllium powder into graphite molds for theManhatten project, says he has berylliosis,a pulmonary disease. The atom bomb wasdeveloped in the Manhattan project. Heworked at Argonne from 1944 to 1953.Duffels claims that he was never warnedby the University of the danger of his joband that the University concealed suchfacts “for the purpose of preventing theplaintiff from filing a claim against the de¬fendant.” .The suit, filed in circuit court Wednes¬day, states that the University didn’t knowof berylliosis until 1951, but even at thatdate kept the knowledge from Duffels.Duffles has filed at this time because hedid not discover his lung abnormalities un¬til July, 1968, after being X-rayed in a cityof Chicago mobile health unit, he said.Duffles, when contacted by the Maroonyesterday, would not comment on the suit,his charges, or what response he has hadfrom the University. He only said that hislawyer, Julian Sinson, would do all thetalking.Sinson was unavailable for comment.Walter Lean, legal counsel for the Uni¬versity, said that the University has notbeen served with the suit and has no com¬ment.Lean said it is normal for a suit not to bereceived until three or four days after fil¬ing. He said that the University did notknow the specifics of the case. one of the 16 academic student councils haschosen noncooperation.The student advisory council of the divi¬sion of the humanities voted Tuesday not toelect a representative to the pool of 16 fromwhich the committee will choose its studentmembers. The reason for their decision, thegradute students state in a resolution sentto Wegener and dean of the humanities di¬vision Robert Streeter, was that the pro¬posed method of selection “gives neitherstudents nor their representatives final de¬cision as to what students will be on thecommittee.”Steven Crockett, graduate humanitiesstudent and chairman of the council, sug¬gested as an alternative method that eachof the student councils elect a representa¬tive, but that the reps choose among ihem-selves the final three.Wegener, professor in humanities and thenew collegiate division, said Thursday hehad received the humanities council’s reso¬lution and planned to talk to members ofthe council in an effort to change theirminds.Wegener said that he knew of no othercouncils planning similar action; at thattime, however, eleven of the other 15 coun¬cils had not communicated with him.While the request for elected representa¬tives was “deliberately vague” about dead¬line dates, Wegener said, he hoped the rep¬resentatives would be elected “as soon aspossible.”According to Lowell Livezey, graduate di¬vinity student and chairman of the jointstudent councils, the student council ofgraduate biological sciences also decidedearlier this week not to elect a representa¬tive, but to wait pending action by the jointcouncils. A meeting of the joint councilswill be scheduled for early next week, ac¬cording to Alan Stone, graduate divinitystudent and chairman of the joint council’ssteering committee.Of the divinity council’s planned responseto Wegener’s request for a representative,Livezey said “It is my prediction that itwon’t just elect somebody for that pool.”Not all of the councils responded nega¬tively to the Wegener committee request,however. Tim Lovain, 70, elected represen¬tative from the social sciences collegiatedivision’s student council, said “Maybemore of the councils are going along be¬cause (assistant professor of mathematicsPaul) Sally is on the (Wegener) com¬mittee.” No Arrests MadeBy Police; MovedTo Private RoomBy Con HitchcockRichard Flacks has given a description ofthe man who assaulted him in his officeMonday afternoon causing two skull frac¬tures and a nearly severed right wrist. Asof late Thursday, police had made no ar¬rests.Police questioned several of the studentswho were expelled after the February sit-inMonday and Tuesday in an attempt to dis¬cover the identity of the assailant. Policeofficials would not disclose from wherethey got the students’ names. Dean of stu¬dents Charles O’Connell stated that nameswere not given the police from his office.Eddie Williams, vice-president for publicaffairs, said he had “no idea where they(the police) could have got the names.”Flacks describes his attacker as a youngwhite man with dark hair between 25 and35, of average height and weight, who cameinto his office dressed in coat and tie andwith a tape recorder. He had told Flackspreviously that he was from an unspecifiedSt. Louis newspaper. Flacks said he had nodistinguishing physical characteristics.Flacks was moved out of the intensivecare unit into a private room on Thursday,and his condition was described by a hospi¬tal spokesman as “reasonably good.” Hismemory, temporarily lost after the assault,began to improve steadily to such a degreethat he was able to describe the assailant.Bob Ross, who accompanied Mrs. Flacksto the hospital Wednesday said that Flackshad lost some sensation in his right hand,although the degree of loss had not beendetermined. Ross said that until the nervesWomen's RoleA sub-committee has been created by thecommittee of the council to investigate thesituation and opportunities “presently en¬joyed by women in the University com¬munity.”The announcement of the committee,dated May 6, says “To the extent the sub¬committee is concerned with problems con¬fronting women as students, it is likewiseencouraged to appoint its own sub-com¬mittee, on which students will be included.”Although Mrs. Bernice Neugarten, profes¬sor in human development and chairman ofthe committee, was unavailable for com¬ment, Miss Catherine Ham, committeemember and assistant professor of English,said that she was not yet sure if studentswould serve on the committee itself or not.Other members of the sub-committee, ap¬pointed with the approval of the council ofthe University senate, include: Mr. Nor¬man Bradburn, professor of business; Dr.Ann M. Lawrence, assistant professor ofmedicine; Mr. H. Gregg Lewis, professor ofeconomics; Miss Soia Mentschikoff, profes¬sor of law; Mrs. Janes Overton, associateprofessor of biology; Mr. J. Alan Thomas,associate professor of education; and Mrs.Susanne Rudolph, associate professor of po¬litical science.The report of the sub-committee is ex¬pected by December 1,1969.The sub-committee has been authorizedby the committee of the council to “retainprofessional staff assistance, from withinor without the University community, sub¬ject to approval of fiscal arrangements bythe dean of faculties (John Wilson).The sub-committee has been requested to in the hand were fully mended, it could notbe determined what dexterity Flacks willhave. Ross also said that Flacks cannotmove his left leg, but is slowly regainingfeeling in it and can now tense the muscles.Flacks’ request that his tenure be consid¬ered this year instead of next is presentlybeing considered by two councils: one incollege sociology and one in the sociologydivision. Morris Janowitz, chairman of thesociology department, said that “the de¬partment is doing everything to respond tohis request.” When asked when a final rec¬ommendation on his position in the divisionwould be reached, Janowitz said, “the de¬partment is doing everything to respond tohis request.” Several members of the soci¬ology department are studying the case be¬fore they submit their recommendation todean of the social sciences division D. GaleJohnson. In the college sociology sectionthe reviewing committee’s recommenda¬tions will be sent to Dean Johnson Monday.From there the recommendations will besent to John Wilson, vice-president and jdean of faculties.The phony reporter contacted Flacks athis home Sunday to arrange an interviewfor the unspecified St. Louis newspaper.(Editors of the two major city papers, thePost - Dispatch and the Globe - Democrat,denied that a reporter was sent to interviewhim. Police are presently checking smallerand suburban papers).The reporter came to Flacks’ office about2:30 pm or later, it is believed. At 2:35Flacks spoke to a Maroon reporter con¬cerning his tenure for about five minutes.The attack happened at 2:45.Flacks recalls the last question he wasasked was “So just what is happening onAmerican campuses? How do you explainit?” At this point the reporter picked up histape recorder and placed it on Flacks’desk. The professor has no recollection ofwhat happened after that.See “Flacks," Page TwoTo Be Studiedexplore “academic employment, the ques¬tions of equity with regard to appointment,r e-appointment and salary merit in¬vestigation.”The sub-committee, as are all councilsub-committees, has only an advisory ca¬pacity and its recommendations are subjectto approval by the council at large.The sub-committee has not met as ofThursday. Miss Ham said that she was notofficially told of her appointment beforeWednesday.The sub-committee was set up at the rec¬ommendation of the Gray committee lastquarter.EDWARD ROSENHEIMAppoints a Subcommittee on WomenWisconsin Students To Hold A Block PartyPlan To Go Ahead EvenWithout A Permit; RiotsFor 3 Days In Madison(This story was written by a reporterwho spent part of the week in Madison not¬ing student and police violence.)MADISON, WIS. — Students and hippiesin the Mifflin Street area have vowed to goahead with plans for a street party tomor¬row with or without a city permit.Police disruption of an unauthorizedblock dance last Saturday sparked threenights of violence and the arrest of more than 100 students from the 32,000-studentUniversity of Wisconsin. Police used teargas and pepper gas against youths whopelted them with eggs and bricks.The Madison City Council was to votelast night on an ordinance to permit thenow banned dances. A poll of 20 of the 22city alderman yesterday, however, showedonly five men who would vote for the mea¬sure, the University of Wisconsin studentnewspaper reported.The college town of some 157,000 personshas been calm since Tuesday, when a com¬mittee of 30 clergymen, professors, andlaw students wearing white armbands wentinto the Mifflin area at the request of May- ON OTHERCAMPUSESor William D. Dyke to talk with residents.The glass and garbage which litteredstreets Tuesday has been cleared. Brokenwindows are boarded up.Residents approved a go-ahead for thisweekend’s planned party at a communitymeeting Wednesday night. Some 300 per¬sons took part- A campus fraternity hasBlack Student Rioting on East CoastSeveral East coast schools includingCCNY, Cornell, Dartmouth, and Howard,were rocked by protest this week, primar¬ily over demands of black students.A battle between black and white stu¬dents took place in City College of NewYork Wednesday after the school wasclosed for the day because of a number ofviolent occurrences. -Seven white students were injured in thebattle, three of which were admitted to anearby hospital for head injuries. Thebattle between the fifty students broke upwhen the sirens of approaching police carswere heard.Shortly thereafter 500 whites cheeredwhen it was announced that the schoolwould be open with adequate police protec¬tion. In the afternoon 100 police clearedhundreds of milling black and Puerto Ricanstudents protesting alleged University rac¬ism. An atmosphere of calm then returnedto the campus troubled by disorders for twoweeks.Faculty members at Pratt Institute inBrooklyn voted to strike Wednesday in pro¬test over the administration’s decision toarrest and expel students found guilty ofcampus disruption. No classes were held atthe school.This policy, which resulted in the strike,was announced Monday after black stu¬dents chained the gates of the school. Thisact resulted in the arrest of 11 people.The suspension of teaching came afterfaculty members listened to usual blackstudent demands. Howard University was closed Wednes¬day by a nearly unanimous vote of the fac¬ulty following an overnight seizure of eightbuildings by militant black students.Following consultation with the facultyTuesday afternoon, President James M.Nabrit received strong endorsement of ananti-militant policy to “get rid of revolu¬tionaries.”The April armed seizure of the studentunion at Cornell is being investigated by aTompkins County, New York, grand jury.This fact was confirmed Wednesday whenseveral University employees were subpoe¬naed.The University faculty had voted to dropcharges against armed black students whooccupied the building, an act which en¬raged many alumni who called for inter¬vention of the civil authorities.Students staging a sit-in at Queens bor¬ough Community College in Bayside, N.Y.,for nearly three weeks seized the admin¬istration building Wednesday, but sur¬rendered it after three hours when thepolice arrived.About 45 students blocked the entrancesto the fourth floor of the building withchairs, desks, and filing cabinets.At other schools in New York City, nomajor incidents occurred in Brooklyn Col¬lege where fires had been set by miliantstudents in three buildings. Classes re¬sumed at Queens College which had beenclosed since Friday because of student dis¬ruptions.New Hampshire and Vermont state police cleared the Dartmouth administrationbuilding of demonstrators early Wednesdaymorning, thus ending a 12 hour sit-in pro¬testing ROTC on campus.The police arrested 5 demonstrators oncharges of criminal contempt of court forrefusing to obey a court injunction to leavethe building.The demonstrators had demanded theROTC program be banned from campusimmediately. The faculty had voted to abol¬ish the program not later than 1973.The police came in at 3:20 am andevicted demonstrators with no one being in¬jured. No clubs were used, although somestudents were dragged out of the buildingto the waiting paddy wagon.Flacks Continued From Page 1 also scheduled another street dance forthe same time and day.Mifflin residents also demanded amnestyfor all persons arrested in the three dayminiriot.Mayor Dyke said Monday that he wouldcall in the Wisconsin National Guard if dis¬orders could not be controlled.The 38-year-old mayor, who took office inthis city 158 miles from the University ofChicago less than three weeks ago, haspromised to support an ordinance to allowthe dances. He has refused to commit him¬self to ordering an investigation of week¬end police activities or supporting the am¬nesty demand.Riot-equipped police lobbed canisters oftear gas and pepper gas at young people —straights, drug freaks, and in-betweens —who refused to disperse after an hour-longstreet meeting with Dyke Monday nightThe youths had set fire to barricades andgarbage cans on the blocked-off street.More than 400 police from the city, coun¬ty and surrounding towns dispersed groupsof youths from street corners in hit-and-run actions. Patrol car and store windowswere smashed and fire bombings were re¬ported at four locations. Damage was lightand the police seldom used clubs. Theyconcentrated on using gas to clear thestreets. Students charged police illegallyentered homes, dorms, and porches. Theycharged brutality.Dyke was meeting with other city offi¬cials yesterday afternoon and could not bereached for comment. It was raining andcold on campus.See "Wisconsin," Page 11University Offers $10,000 RewardTuesday, the University announced thatit was offering $10,000 reward to anyonewho could give information leading to thearrest of the person(s) who assaultedFlacks. Persons with information are urgedto contact Lt. Edward Landis of Area One-Homicide at 756 East 56th Place or to callWA2-4747, extension 361 or 324-3247.President Edward Levi spoke to Mrs.Flacks Monday after he learned of the at¬tack and offered her whatever assistancethe University could give. Mrs. Flacks re¬sponded that the only thing he could dowould be to dispell the rumors concerning suicide which had been circulating atioutcampus. Levi visited the hospital alongwith John Wilson and Eddie Williams laterthat night in an effort to see Mrs. Flackspersonally. They also spoke with the doc¬tors in an attempt to confirm that therewas no suicide attempt and left when theyrealized she wasn’t there.Except for one hate letter which read, “Itcouldn’t happen to a nicer guy. Too badthey didn’t slit your throat,” Mrs. Flackssaid that she has received only letterswhich were very sympathetic and kind.MUSICRAFT SPECIAL“By all means listento this $95 speaker...This is not justanother box!” hi n/stm* twit* A.D.C. Model 303A SPEAKERThe Brentwood ^77^The ADC 303A has been widely acclaimed in audio technical reportsby high fidelity authorities. For example, here’s what Julian Hirschof Hirsch-Houck Laboratories had to say in Hi Fi/Stereo Review.“After the lab measurements had been made, and I had achance to analyze the data, I began to appreciate howunusual this speaker system really is.”“For one thing, my tests confirmed the manufacturer’s claimed frequen¬cy response of 35 to 20,000 cps — 3 db measured in an average listen¬ing room.’’/”... the Brentwood has a true, effective response down to at least 33cps, with lower distortion than I have measured on many larger and morecostly speaker systems, under similar conditions.”ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.-OE 7-4150 „/*'•'# MM A MM /M /MMM~ 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500* HmiCuift theof adventure scentmen's toiletries byVAN HEU8EN*the FIRSTto LAST... and LAST... and LASTCohn A Stern(Hmmt Sc(EampuaShop TAKCAM-YfcNCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out318 East 63rd MU4-1062EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Ploza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Most complete photoand hobby store onthe South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student DiscountsHit 11 hll1 Hi III mi2/The Chicago Maroon/May 9, 1969I■ * v |V * • * * * % t» uT% A I % & ?Confrontation at FSACCSL MeetingsPwH-gto-h ?deferments, physicals, con¬scientious objection, rejec¬tion. appeals, alternativeservice, counseling, legalaid. prison, foreign travel,emigration, filling outforms.The most accurate andcomplete book available!GUIDETO THE DRAFTby Arlo Tatum andJoseph S. Tuchinsky$5.95; paper, $1.95At your bookstore,from draft counselingservices, or direct from:25 Beacon StreetBoston, Massachusetts 02108open Thursday & Friday eveningsMembers SuggestElectoral ReformAnd CensureConfrontations marked the first meetingof the new members of the faculty studentadvisory committee on campus student life(FSACCSL).Four student members of the committee,Cassie Schwartz, 70, and graduate studentsRob Cooley, Peter Rabinowitz and BillCooley, presented a set of proposals at themeeting including a motion to change thechairman of the committee from dean ofstudents, Charles O’Connell, sponsor of thecommittee.Among other proposals presented were:• Revision of the election procedure forFSACCSL.• Adopting an alternative disciplinarystatement to the one adopted by the oldFSACCSL at its last meeting.• Establishing a procedure for obtaininga 50 per cent student representation on thecouncil of the University senate.• A condemnation of Dean O’Connell forsending a letter to all incoming studentsBreakfasts HeldTo View IssuesStudents from most of the undergraduateand graduate student councils have beenparticipating with members of other stu¬dent organizations in breakfast meetingswith President Edward Levi.The meetings involve open discussion ofcurrent issues concerning students and theuniversity, including disciplinary proce¬dures, the quarter system, teaching of un¬dergraduates, and student role in the com¬munity. In addition to student council rep-resentat:ves members of the Inter-HouseCouncil, the Inter-Fraternity Council, theMarshall’s Aides and the Maroon KeySociety are participating in the meetings.Presidential assistant Jerry Frese said thattwo, three or four faculty have beenpresent at each discussion.President Levi has continued to takepart, in conjunction with the breakfastmeetings, in the presidential seminars.These are meetings with a group of onerepresentative from each of the under¬graduate divisions, the graduate divisionsand the professional schools. The seminarshave been held since last December. Rob Cooley countered Ashin’s statementwhen he said “One of the obvious problems'1is that it is very hard to get through tothese people; that, for example, you reallyare hostile towards the attitudes that theyhave been throwing at you for two quar¬ters. One faculty member at FSACCSL ex¬pressed surprise at the degree of studentanger. I could only ask myself just wherehe had been since the end of January.“They (the faculty) were really surprisedby our anger. I had to ask myself if theywere being hypocritical or that they hadtheir heads in the sand so long that theydon’t realize what is going on here”, headded.O’Connell said “Yesterday’s meeting wassymbolic. If these meetings continue to bespitting politics at each other, nothing willbe accomplished. I only hope that their en¬thusiasm can be put into effective chan¬nels.”He added, “Everybody talks about feltneeds and these students had a felt need. Itwas an introductory meeting where peoplewith strong opinions voiced them. Whenthey got down to it, they had some substan¬tive things to say.”New MeasuresNot PlannedUniversity security police say they areplanning “no special measures” followingattacks on three city policemen near thecampus Wednesday night.Security director captain Francis Dela¬ney said his men were not called in on anyof the Wednesday incidents.In three separate attacks, city policemanJesse Smith, 41, was killed at 1206 E. 47thStreet, Sidney Smith was injured at 900 E.47th Street and Fred Terrile was injured at1315 E. 62nd Street.Delaney said that although perhaps hewas being too blunt, “the University secur¬ity tries to mind its own business.” He ex¬plained that unless they are specificallycalled into a case which is not within theirjurisdiction, they do not get involved.Delaney said that the University had re¬ceived no calls on the cases but he felt that“all patrolmen should be ready for any¬thing.”No unusual occurrences have been re¬ported on campus according to Delaney,but “we’ve been fortunate in this regard.”Demandtheshirt!VAN HEUSEN"417” VANOPRESSDemonstrate your prowess as a campus independent byholding out for the best in "now” shirt fashion ...Van Heusen "417" Vanopress! The one with new longpoint Brooke collar, made to be worn with or withouta pin ... plus V-Taper fit, 7-button front, longer shirt tail.With forever-fresh permanently pressed Vanopress.In richer new colors, exciting new stripes and checks.Ask to see "417” Vanopress by Van Heusen ...where "new" really means "now!”Cohn A Stem©aunt Sc (OutturnsShopIN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKCHUCK BERRY: As he appeared in concert Tuesday in Mande!House Antonomy Study Being MadeSeveral members of a student-faculty-ad¬ministration committee are drafting a re¬port which will recommend a system ofhouse autonomy for next year.Members hope to complete the report bynext week.The report, in rough draft form and sub¬ject to change, deals with the nature of thedormitory house, dormitory regulations,and interhouse-council programs. The re¬port recommends a set of guidelines forhouse rules.An IHC appeals committee, which wouldmediate disputes and solve house problems,is also provided. The committee would bemade up of seven students, chosen by IHC, two faculty members, chosen by the com¬mittee of the council, and one adminis¬trator, chosen by the dean of students.Members of the IHC committee on houseautonomy are James Vice, assistant deanof students, Edward Turkington, director ofstudent housing, Marilyn McCormick, asso¬ciate director of student housing, Knox Hill,professor of philosophy, Jerry Webman,71, Chris Bates, 70, Marshall Seeder, 71,Margery Pearson, 71, Ann Hamblin, 70,and Georgia Lind ’69.VAN HEUSEN"417”VANOPRESS SHIRTSinforming them of the Universitys’ dis¬ciplinary procedure.• An investigation of the faculty privi¬leges in the University libraries.David Friedman, another new member ofthe committee, also presented a proposal toset up a system whereby students couldpay for a chair on the faculty.Rabinowitz said “The fact that only 20per cent of the students voted in theFSACCSL elections may mean that 80 percent of the students are apathetic but itmay also mean that 50 or 60 or 70 per centof them are hostile to this committee andthe way it has operated in the past.”He also said “I was disappointed al¬though not really surprised by the lack ofunderstanding the faculty members haveabout the depth of frustration, resentmentand alienation that students on this campushave. Until the faculty becomes aware ofthis, there is no hope of a solution whichThe movers, the stimulators, collegemen turning their “now” thoughts intoaction, demand the best in “now”shirt fashion . . . Van Heusen “417”Vanopress. Featuring the new longerpoint Brooke collar, made to be wornwith or without a pin, V-Taper fit, 7-button front, longer shirt tail. And withVanopress, the last word in perma¬nent press. All in rich new solid tones,exciting new stripes and checks.Van Heusen "417” Vanopress...where"new" really means "now!"And now from Van Ifausan... Paaaport 3*0 Mon'a Tollotrloa. stems out of rational discourse and othersuch things.”The four students were obviously hostileat the meeting, but Rob Cooley said “Whatseemed to be going on at the meeting wasexactly what has been going on everywhereon this campus — ‘Well, don’t get angry,don’t get excited. Let’s reason together,’seems to be the pat response. Maybe weshould have been hostile long ago. I per¬sonally don’t like to do it; it violates myconcept of human decency in the way Iwant to relate to human beings. I don’tthink hostility will do anything, either.’Mark Ashin, professor of English and afaculty member of FSACCSL said “Consid¬ering that this was the first meeting of thenew FSACCSL I thought there was a jock-ying for position. I hope this was a super¬ficial attitude. They seemed to want todrive their ideas into the facultys’ heads.Well, my mind is open to all ideas.”May 9, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3Letters Cantinoad frem Page OneLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE AAAROONThe circular warns the student not to“coerce individual members of the Univer¬sity community.” Am I not being coercedby being threatened with “disciplinary ac¬tion, not excluding expulsion”? I have noteven joined the University “community,”and yet I am being threatened with ex¬pulsion. This “community” is obviouslypretty exclusive. It is also obviously notmuch of a community.Mr. O’Connell, let us face facts. The Uni¬versity of Chicago can no longer get awaywith this “communit* jf intellectual pur¬pose” bit. The University is no more alooffrom social and political issues than is, say,Standard Oil. It is no more distant fromracism and corruption than is, say, a SouthSide slumlord.*Mr. O’Connell, you are uptight. You knowthat you will soon have to face this truth:that the University community is an elitistbody that rationalizes its own inaction andirrelevance by labeling all other ap¬proaches — all genuine, heartfelt ap¬proaches to America’s great problems — asanti-intellectual. But I don’t think you real¬ly care that much about intellectualism, be¬cause threatening people with expulsion isnot very intellectual. I think that basicallyyou care about maintaining the status quo.In a time of national peril, you are offstudying systems maintenance. You are up¬tight, Mr. O’Connell. It is a shame that itwill be necessary to “harass or coerce indi¬vidual members of the University commu¬nity.”But I too have a problem, Mr. O’Connell.As you have construed them, the Universitycommunity and the American communityare mutually exclusive. By “Americancommunity” I mean rich people and poorpeople, blacks and whites, intellectuals andnonintellectuals. Could I perhaps retain myAmerican citizenship while enrolled at theUniversity?Michael BrentRejects UC(The following letter was sent by a pros¬pective education student to Dr. KennethRehage, dean of students in the graduateschool of education.).Recent occurrences at the University ofChicago, notably the expulsion of forty-sev¬en students for occupying a building, forceme to decline your most generous offer ofadmission and financial assistance to theGraduate School of Education. For toolong, I have been exploited and coerced bythe bureaucratic institution of higher edu¬cation; I can no longer knowingly subjectmyself to this blatant, and patently un¬democratic, intimidation.The University of Chicago has effectivelydemonstrated the fact that it is dedicatedto the preservation of the status quo in¬stead of to meaningful and constructivechange, that it serves the interests of busi¬ness and industry instead of those of thepeople. It tolerates dissent only when suchaction is unobtrusive, and consequently in¬effective; it systematically squelches allsignificant attempts for action. Worst ofall, the University will not allow its ownsystem and purpose to be questioned.While it continues to cater to the powerstructure of the larger society, at the sametime it hypocritically hides behind the“Ivory Tower” myth, proclaiming its lackof involvement in society as a whole andits solely “intellectual purpose,” ex¬pounding upon the doctrine of “classroominviolability,” inventing its own arbitrary— and terribly convenient — definitions of“dissent” and “disruption.”I can’t accept any of this. And you havetold me, in almost so many words, thatyou don’t want me around if there existsthe slightest possibility that I might inter¬fere with the efficient functioning of yourmachine. Therefore, while I sincerely ap¬preciate your concern and generosity, Icannot help but feel that by declining youroffer I will save both of us a lot of troubleand trauma. Best of luck in the future, Dr. Rehage.You’re going to need it.Linda RobersonOberlin CollegeProgrammed BiasWill wonders never cease? Nixon admit¬ted he made a mistake in excluding fromconsideration for the post of NSF Direc¬tor a man who publicly opposed the Admin¬istration on ABM deployment. During a re¬cent Mandel Hall meeting, a leader of theIllinois Black Panther Party admitted thatthe party makes mistakes, but added that“we correct them.”In a discussion about the desirability ofappointing judges with a particular policybias, a law professor appeared astonishedwhen several students indicated they wouldnot appoint an anti-Communist judge, inpreference to someone who had not madeup his mind about Communism, to rule onfree speech cases (presumably involving,among others, Communists). The candor ofthe law professor is to be admired, but Iwould not want my fate in the hands of acourt, or a disciplinary committee, whichhe had appointed, bias is easy enough tocome by without programming it in.Setting aside the personal integrity of in¬dividual Oaks Committee members, the re¬cent “Spartacus II” analysis showing “sys¬tematic discrimination against studentswith radical political views” suggests thatthose who appointed faculty alone to thedisciplinary committee have a sense of jus¬tice similar to that of the law professor.Perhaps another mistake has been made. Ifso, and it is hard for me to imagine any¬thing more obvious, there is no time likethe present to admit the mistake and cor¬rect it.Richard S McMillanLaw StudentDUR in WoodlawnHow long until nearly a dozen blackworking families living at 6047-49 S. Kim-bark feel the oppression of UC complicityin urban removal? To reside between StonyIsland and Cottage Grove in the DMZ-des-ignate is often problematic for a black per¬son in Woodlawn, but especially so whenthe visible signs of the approaching de¬struction are literally next door.On April 8 Mr. Edward Durr, a Depart¬ment of Urban Renewal (DUR) staffer, in¬formed this writer that DUR had assumedthe management of the building to thesouth (6051 S. Kimbark) on April 7. All ofthe residents are white and most are stu¬dents. According to the staffer, the tenta¬tive “target” date (for evacuating thebuilding) is July 7, conveniently somethree weeks after the end of spring Quar¬ter.The building to the north (6045 S. Kim¬bark) has been condemned and is uninhab¬ited. And to the southwest, one sees thenorth side of 61st Street leveled betweenKimbark and Woodlawn.In early February, a DUR relocationworker assured a (white) student living at6051 S. Kimbark that there would be littlechance that the black families living nextdoor could move back into the neighbor¬hood, mainly since no comparably pricedhousing was (ingeniously!) scheduled to bebuilt nearby. The DUR worker gratuitouslyreminded the ungrateful student how help¬ful it was that the City assisted UC ex¬pansion through the acquisition of suchproperties.One David against the approachingGoliath is the Woodlawn Tenants’ Associ¬ation (WTA). formed in late 1968. TheWoodlawn Booster-Bulletin reported in De¬cember that the purpose of WTA is to aidWoodlawn tenants who do not wish to“.. .submit to forced relocation in ghettoesor in apartments that are less desirableand less convenient for their work,” ac¬cording to Mrs. Douglas Moffet, WTA pres¬ident and then resident of 6043 Woodlawn.However, even as Fredrika Blankner, owner of 604345 Woodlawn, filed suit totest the constitutionality of using govern¬mental power to transfer private propertyfrom one private owner (Miss Blankner) toanother (UC), the Corporation Counsel’soffice moved to take over the building. (Cf.“Renewal vs. Rights,” Chicago’s Ameri-an, 3-31-69, p. 6.)An obfuscating footnote is added by theSubcommittee on the South Campus. Whileconceding that UC’s responsibility is thatof “an interested and concerned party,” itsafely glosses over recent history by ab¬solving the University of “responsibilityfor relocation and demolition in SouthCampus” (Interim Report, January, 1969).As a suggestion, discussion of the politicsof the Illinois Neighborhood Redevelop¬ment Act of 1953 certainly would have beenin order. And on a national scale, a forth¬right appraisal of the subsequent federalstatute nicknamed the “Julian Levi Law”could have been instructive.Vince PollardSome IdeasTo make “demands” on the Universityonly supports the paternalistic system of• Educate congressmen by using colders if they will avoid dependance on profes¬sors and administrators and do their ownthing. They can:• Collect and publish evaluations ofteaching performance of all professors on.campus, print and sell this information inthe co-op bookstore and publish a list com¬paring student evaluation with actual pro¬motions.• Collect enough money to hire MarleneDixon to give a course. The University canthen be tapped for an indirect contributionby using one of its classrooms.• Prepare biographies, publication lists and teaching evaluations of individualswhich they wish to have hired by the Uni¬versity and after confidentially (!) sound¬ing such candidates out, so propose to theUniversity. Let the onus of not hiring out¬standing teachers then be on the faculty.• Ditto for promotions and firings.• Prepare specific and reasoned argu¬ments why courses should be dropped,modified or instituted. Publish faculty ac¬tion in these matters.• Study police procedures. Prepare acode of conduct for police in encounterswith demonstrations of dissent. Prepare acode for demonstrators.'• Join the Dump Daley Movement. Dothe work of a ward heeler and watch themovement pile up the votes (Student sup¬port of Stevenson for mayor will do won¬ders for Daley and the city of Chicago).• Ditto re doorbell-ringing for aldermen,representatives and congressmen.• Educate congressmen by using coldreason on hunger, slums, ABMs and thewar.• Study tax loopholes. Prepare and mailfair tax proposals to every congressman,newspaper, professor, shopkeeper, worker,fixed income-wage earner, farm subsityrecipient, oil depletion allowee and tax pay¬er.• Study the military-industrial complex,how to infiltrate it and make use of it.• Etc., etc., etc.The student government, the studentcouncils or some student(s) could organizea clearing house for additional ideas. Untilsuch time I am willing to perform thischore (in my own paternalistic fashion, ofcourse).Herbert AnkerDepartment of BiochemistryContinued from Page SixTrue, perhaps, that the demonstration wasn'tterribly successful-but the spirit it generated iswhat maybe will save this University!It was also apparent that many students did not feel the personal threat made clearby the faculty’s willingness to eliminate more than 100 students without even theformality of a fair hearing. Even if one accepts the “ivory tower” concept of aUniversity, this kind of indifference can only lead to rapid decline. The battle againstencroaching oblivion is not fought with apathy, no matter what one considers thealternative to be.Whether or not there is a chance for community to develop within the Universityin the future is doubtful. It is clear from the most recent statement (April 30) of theCouncil of the senate that the faculty is yet afraid of joining with students on an equalbasis to discuss discipline. (Are the advocates of student power to take heart from theimplication that faculty can only discourse rationally with students when theyoutnumber the latter?)Is there any way to prevent this University from being merely a statistic amongrecent campus disorders? Maybe not, given the tide of current history. If thealternative to going under is surviving in its present divided, treasonablyanachronistic state, then perhaps comitment to the ideals of the institution demandthat we let it fall and try to build something better. If we see the risks in that courseas too great, the chaos too threatening, we have to confront our problems honestly.Somehow we have to make it stop being a waste of time to talk with one another,as it is now. The problem is not “generation gap” — our experience in the tent-inproved that. Some of our best tactics came out of discussions with facultyand administration friends. True, perhaps, that the demonstration wasn’t terrificallysuccessful — but the spirit it generated is what maybe will save this University. Therewas no pompousness, no arrogance such as we met continually in the upper reachesof the power structure. A non-negotiating attitude makes no more sense than anon-negotiable demand.What we asked for was a change of heart. The response showed a willingness tochange only if that would better defend the unreason against which we protested. Ifwe are compelled to be as defensive as that, what point is there even in discussingthe issues?While some faculty in some departments have seen the handwriting on the walland begun intradepartmental reforms, similar changes in matters of concern to theUniversity at large have not been forthcoming. It seems that as long as “rationaldiscourse” in the areas of discipline, racism, and the issues of the sit-in is discouragedby recalcitrant and intolerant response, disruptive demonstrations, inefficient as theyare, will prevail.Miss Leighton is a fourth year student in the College. She resigned as a studentobserver from the Oaks disciplinary committee last quarter, and led the April tent-inand hunger strike.May 9, 1969/Tha Chicago Mamon/9r800"ToTeflfTontevT"*m i100 Hospital Workers,Secretaries, StudentsVote To Rally ThursdayBy Ellen KirschnerAt a meeting in Ida Noyes Hall Thursdaynight 100 students, hospital workers, andcampus secretaries voted to hold a rally ofUniversity employees, students, faculty,and their children to present to EdwardLevi the petition for a University-funded,client-run, child care center.The petition, which has 800 signatures,and whch is supported by the 775 membersof the hospital workers union, demands thefree, parent-controlled center for the chil¬ dren deserve the very best child care pos-and faculty, which would be open 24 hoursa day to accomodate workers on all shiftsand would provide for children of all ages.The rally is scheduled for Thursday, May15, at 12:30 pm in President Levi’s office.A speaker representing WRAP, the Wom¬en’s Radical Action Project, opened themeeting with an explanation of the need forthe child-care center: “We see the childcare center as crucial for all women, notjust those who have small children now.Until excellent free child care is providedfor the children of all women who need orwant it, women will remain second-classcitizens in this society and in this Univer¬sity.” The speaker, who would not identifyherself, emphasized that the University ofChicago runs on the woman power of hun¬dreds of secretaries, hospital workers, andGroup Blasts UR DistortionIn March, the University public information office published a pamphlet entitled“University—Community Relations,” a review of the properties owned by theUniversity of Chicago in the surrounding community, and of some of the University’scontributions to the community.” In other words, it is a PR piece on the University’srole in urban renewal of Woodlawn.Among other things, the pamphlet tries to prove that the people of Woodlawn do notmind being renewed out of their homes.On page one, the University pamphlet quotes a report by Leo Shapiro and Associatesto the effect that, of the 1,196 Woodlawn people they interviewed, “1,104 or 92.3 percentstated that they wished to move: when asked ‘Where would you want to move?’ 973or 88.1 percent responded ‘Not in this neighborhood.”After much effort, I was able to obtain a copy of the Shapiro Report. These statisticssimply are not contained within it.It is in fact so blatant a distortion that I would like to make clear exactly how theUniversity misrepresented the facts.This is page 23 from the Shapiro Report:»• M i » I?' »v other female staff. Although they occupythe lowest paid jobs, they are expected toassume full responsibility for the care oftheir children which often amounts to one-third to one-half of their salary. “All chil¬dren deserve the very best child care pos¬sible, and women deserve to be able tokeep their salaries without having to worrythat their children will be neglected be¬cause they are assuming a position ofequality in the work force. The Universitymust be forced to be responsible to thewomen that it supports. It must act now onthe child care stand.”The WRAP representative described theUniversity’s proposed child care center atthe school of social service administrationas “a minute step in the right direction,”but claimed that it will not fulfill the needsof the University community as it will belimited to 150 children at least two years ofage, will be open only to those already us¬ing the existing facilities of SSA, and willrequire a fee. She stated that it is designedmainly as a laboratory for the field work ofsocial work students.Also speaking at the meeting was Mrs. Dorothy Dale, a representative of the chil¬dren center program, run by the publicschool system of the city of San Francisco.Mrs. Dale expressed amazement at thelack of facilities in Hyde Park. San Fran¬cisco’s tuition free child care center wasstarted during World War II to providewoman power for the war effort, and hasbeen kept alive only by the continued activelobbying of parents. Mrs. Dale emphasizedthe need for parental involvement, and fora real continuity between the home and thecenter. A child care center should be morethan a babysitting service, she said. Itshould have adequate supervision, mate¬rials, and space to provide children with ameaningful, working, learning, and grow¬ing experience.Mrs. Dale gave a detailed account of thefacilities and organizations of the San Fran¬cisco center. Significant distances betweenthe centers she described and the Chicagoplan are that the University, rather thanthe public education system, would providethe funds, and the center would care forinfants as well as pre-school and schoolchildren.Decentralization Will RaisePower Of Ghetto's BlacksHEW's James FarmerSays Melting Pot IdeaHurts Cultural Pluralism Today, he said, blacks are becoming in¬creasingly conscious of the values of ethniccohesiveness. “We’ve gotten over the illu¬sion that the ghetto has to be dispersed,”he but warned: “Just as we build uptlv- to, so we must simultaneously buildup cit from it.”FELT NEED TO MOVEQUESTION: “Looking ahead* how long do you think this apartment house willsatisfy your family’s needs?”( ) ALWAYS ( ) FOR NEXT YRS.ALL HOUSEHOLDS 1778Not Reporting 46Reporting 1732ALL HOUSEHOLDS REPORTING 1732Always 536Less than 1 year 3441 year 2172 years 1343 oi 4 years 655 to 20 years , 34Can’t tell, can’t predict when 402In saying that this shows that 92.3 percent (or 1,104 out of 1,196) of the people inWoodlawn “stated that they wished to move,” the University makes three majorerrors.First, it is not 1,104 out of 1,196, but rather 1,104 out of 1,732, the total number ofpeople who answered the question. Clearly, this doesn’t give 92.3 percent, but rather64 percent.Second, unless people categorically state that they “always” wish to remain in theirpresent housing, the University pamphlet includes them in the 1,104 who “stated thatthey wished to move.” Thus, persons wishing to move in “5-20 years” are coded aswanting to move. Even persons who “can’t tell, can’t predict when” are coded aswanting to move. Clearly, many people who think they might want to move in thefuture, when their life situation changes, would object very strongly to moving in thepresent.The third error concerns interpretation of the statistics. The question is said tomeasure “felt need to move.” The fact that housing will not “satisfy your family’sneeds” is automatically seen as “felt need to move;” for people who usually live inunsatisfactory housing and who can’t move into better housing, this is an unwarrantedinference.Also, a later question (p. 25) makes it clear that 38 people said the housing wouldn tsatisfy their needs as it was going to be torn down for Urban Renewal.The second statistic the University quotes is equally distorted. . .when asked,Where would you want to move?’ 973 or 88.1 percent responded ‘Not in thisneighborhood.’ ”This percentage is arrived at by dividing 973 by 1,104, an irrelevant number from thestatistic explained above. It should be divided by 1,667, the number of people whoanswered the question, (p. 26). Then the percentage falls to 58 percent.Even this percentage is suspicious as it is contradicted in two other places in thereport. People are asked if they “want to live in an apartment” on Cottage Grovebetween 61st and 63rd Street, which is certainly in the Woodlawn neighborhood. Onethousand ninety seven out of 1,698, or 64 percent say yes; 601, or 35 percent, say no.(p. 32). Of those who say no, only 222 say they don’t want to live in the neighborhood.Ip. 33).These are only a few of the distortions contained in the University’s justification ofurban renewal.A group of students is trying to investigate further into the University’s urbanrenewal policies in Woodlawn. We meet on Mondays at 4 pm in Reynolds Club Southand we need help from more students who are willing to devote some time to thisProject.Ann Cordillia5521 S. University413-3896Grad. StudentSociology, , Assistant secretary of Health, Educationand Welfare (HEW) James Farmer, speak¬ing in Breasted Hall last night, said urbandecentralization is a valuable means bywhich to give blacks more control overtheir lives in ghettos. “We must place inthe hands of those on the outside who havebeen looking in the fences knothole. . .someof the levels of power and decision-mak¬ing,” he urged before a capacity audience.Farmer said the civil rights movement aslate as five years ago was dominated by“color blind, dispersionist thinking” withroots in the New Deal. He said black lead¬ers then wanted to tear down the ghettoassuming it would soon disappear and itspopulation would be scattered. “No blackleader of consequence until recent yearswould have proposed improving the ghetto,much less controlling it,” he said.Farmer opposed this thinking, calling forupgrading of black neighborhoods to giveresidents control of their lives economicallyas well as politically, and cited the meritsof voluntary ethnic communities. “I wishwe would stop thinking of the nation as amelting pot,” he complained. “That doesinjustice to the idea of cultural pluralism.” Along the same lines Farmer said he wasin favor of black studies programs, blackcultural centers, and predominantly blackdormitories on college campuses, so long asthey would not specifically exclude whitestudents.He noted that some aspects of govern¬ment, such as the legal system, should re¬main centralized, with guidelines by whichlower levels could function, but, that manyothers, such as school systems, should bedecentralized because they presently arenot serving black people. “The parents aresaying, ‘We won’t have it,’ ” he said.“People are demanding to be heard.”Farmer added that civil rights progresshas come from confrontation and agitation,and that this will inevitable continue. Healso said he believed that black peoplecould also exert political pressure on Presi¬dent Nixon, who fears strong black supportfor Sen. Ted Kennedy, (D-Mass) to supporta domestic Vietnam in the ghettos.Farmer spoke in the Center for UrbanStudies’ lecture series on “Centralization vsDecentralization.” Floyd Hyde, another as¬sistant secretary of HEW, will speak nextThursday, May 15, at 8 pm in Breasted.Admission is without ticket or charge.fdeesQUE VOUS TROUVEREZ INTERESSANTESET PRECIEUSES A LA FOIS• Assurance-vie avec argent remis• Protection du revenu• Paiement de 1 hypotheque• Fonds de retraite• Instruction des enfants• Sauvegarde des interets dans uneentreprisePermettez-moi de vous indiquer comment vous pouvezen profiter.Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,One North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602 Others by Appt.FR 2-2390 — 798-0470SUN T JFK PI J CANADA HANDCRAFTED GOLD& CUSTOM SILVERJEWELRY5210 HARPER CT.667-8040i aMay 9, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5Tjt:iiif'I::I-fIi »'7SV'*W*I f4 <•f. f;; *‘ f1,44*•'•* tI t> «I Iik. a Students andRepresentationThe Wegener committee on discipline, set up last week, isnot yet complete; its three student members, to be chosen by thefaculty on the committee from a slate of elected candidates, havenot yet been appointed. There is evidence that there may be diffi¬culty about their appointment. One student council has refusedto choose a representative; other councils may be considering likemoves, giving as the reason that the procedure by which the com¬mittee is set up is unacceptable.There is no question that the Wegener committee is an un¬satisfactory reply to the pressing need for meaningful review ofcurrent disciplinary procedures. We are waiting to hear any at¬tempt at an explanation for setting up a committee with twice asmany faculty as students to investigate processes that affect stu¬dents at least as seriously as they affect faculty. We are also wait¬ing to hear why students are not capable of choosing their ownrepresentatives. It is this last point which prompted the humanitiescouncil to refuse to elect a representative; they felt that to goalong with this procedure would be to accept what is basicallyappeasement.It is clear to most students what is wrong with the procedure:faculty and students have different interests, and to filter studentrepresentation through a faculty selecting group, no matter howpure their intentions, results in distortion. Faculty may not see thisso clearly. Perhaps it will be clearer if they try to recall their ownfeelings of outrage when it was proposed that students have theright to review faculty decisions on appointment of their facultypeers.The issue of student representation is important, and we hopethat the other councils won’t let this pass. If all the councils decidednot to send representatives to be then chosen by faculty members,perhaps then the council of the University senate, which set upthese procedures, would realize that such a message of selectionis unsatisfactory. It’s not quite clear to us why the council cannever revise any of its decisions, and although this obstinacy is along-standing tradition, that doesn’t mean it can’t some day change.This is a good opportunity to ask for such a change. It’s not un¬reasonable to ask that students be allowed to pick their repre¬sentatives, and if the joint student councils could impress thefaculty council with this fact, who knows — they might admitthat the council might sometimes be wrong?Spring andFestival of the ArtsStrange things have been happening on campus lately. Somestrange things happen this time of year — people sit on the grass,Hyde Park turns green. This year, however, is unique; and thingsare happening that we haven’t seen in a long time. People — sitting,listening to an outside concert begin to talk to each other. A FOTAworkshop gives people a chance to do the things they think aboutall year long.The Festival of the Arts — FOTA — is doing something trulyfine. Students are responding with interest and participation. Thecampus is more alive than we’ve ever seen it. Having recently hadsome sour views about the lack of support for students’ efforts tomake this campus a pleasant and more lively place, it’s especiallynice to see enthusiastic spectators at FOTA’s events.The people who are organizing FOTA are to be applauded.They are giving this community something it’s needed for a longtime — a bit of joy. After the long, bitter winter, it’s good to seepeople smiling again. Response of the Committee‘When they hear you are not eating they offerchicken soup and medical advice. If you tell themyou're hungry for justice or a feeling of belong¬ing and effectiveness they tell you to go awayand keep your place/By Mary Sue LeightonObservations on Faculty and Administrators in High Places: “It’s no good sayingit. They don’t understand.” (A. A. Milne, Independence) With multitudinous pleasfrom the enemy camp to return to rational discourse, I’ve explored the path ofdialogue up various byways. Unlike disruptive demonstration, talk has provedvirtually fruitless.On two occasions groups of us from the hunger strike met with the Committeeof the Council. On the first occasion, after talking for more than an hour about thenature of the University community, the relationships of its members, and the kind ofjustice we ought to feel compelled to grant one another, we were chided for not havingdone our “homework.” “Why don’t you have more concrete proposals?” theCommittee asked. We reminded them that they had already been presented with twosuggestions from faculty and students. Acknowledging the limitations of our wisdomand experience we students suggested working together with the faculty to come upwith an answer. The Committee insisted that if we were going to “complain,” weshould present an alternative.A major criticism of the “demands” of the sit-in were that they insisted on certainresults rather than just new ways of coming to them. This was construed by thefaculty as dictatorial. On the other hand, we were criticized for “demanding” merelya reinvestigation of decision-making processes, on the grounds that it wasn’t enoughto show that one mode of action was right — we also had to show it was effective. Asif it has ever helped to cite the success of other universities!And then we were reminded for the seventeenth galling time that we didn’tunderstand that reaching agreement was not the only indication of real communication(Everyone comes up with that statement as if he had thought of it independently!)When it became apparent at the time of the first interview that the Committee hadthus far successfully resisted attempts of various campus groups to communicate theprevailing sense of the unfairness of the disciplinary proceedings, we offered to returnwith the evidence supporting the allegations. We chose as our primary documentationthe second issue of Spartacus. To defend the findings, we assembled the three studentobservers to the Oaks committee who had resigned at the end of February. The fourthmember of our ^mtip was a hunger-striker who in her capacity as a Maroon reporterhad also ample supporting mformation.The first move of the Committee of the Council was to find fault with the paper —from nit-picking about statistical correlations (which were hardly of utmostimportance since the sample was 50 percent of the population) to criticing the methodof interview. They hardly had time to spare for comment on substantive issues — fear,oppression, hostility, inequity of treatment. We spent two hours substantiating fromour personal experience the findings of Spartacus II. At the end of that time, theCommittee came up with some astonishing remarks.One member of the Committee thought we had been participants in the sit-in, andafter inquiring how we had been “taken in” by “the Dixon matter,” was gentlyreminded that we had been effectively out of commission for the duration of the sit-in.Several others than stated quite openly that the only thing they were convinced of byour statements was that many students got off too lightly by lying about theirparticipation and political bents. We had merely tried to demonstrate the impossibilityof proving guilt from available evidence.It is on these experiences, together with others of the past months that I concludethat it really is “no good saying it.” (When they hear you are not eating, they offerchicken soup and medical advice. If you tell them you’re hungry for justice or afeeling of belonging and effectiveness they till you to go away and keep your place.Which leads me to further observations on Community: “TrueIt isn’t much fun for One, but TwoCan stick together,” (Pooh Bear, in Us Two);“Solidarity Forever.”While we were trying to sell the idea of cooperation to the University at large,we found that the campsite in the main quadrangle became a central gathering placefor a lot of people who had been working the same problems. Friends we never metbefore arrived with thermoses of hot tea or cold orange juice or jars of vitamins.People manned the tents while we went to classes or to the library to warm up.Surreptitious permissions were granted for our use of facilities in the nearest buildingsthrough the nights. We discovered that there was a handful of people who hadcontinued the work of education of “the masses” begun in the ad building.On the other hand there was evidence of an overwhelming lack of concern on thepart of most of the University. The faculty were dismayed at the thought of a handfulof students starving but were essentially unmoved by the prospect of the destruction ofthe University from inner corruption, to which they were contributing by their inaction.See 'Gadfly/ Page Nine■IKK? THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch BobkinProduction Chief: Mitch KahnNews Board:Leslie Strauss, Wendy Glockner, Con Hitch¬cock, Rob CooleyNews Staff: Jim Haefemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Bruce Norton, Steve Cook, Gerard Leval,Richard Paroutaud, Alfred Ryan, FriedaMurray, Debby Dobish, Blair Kilpatrick,Leonard Zax, Chris Fraula, Greg FergusonPhotography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert, Mark IsraelSenior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, John RechtSunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege .Press Service.t i ■>[ ,, ,6/The Chicago Maroon/May 9, 1969 t\ ir i 1 * .*» 3flLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONAttacks on the LeftDick Flacks lies in the hospital with afractured skull. The attacker is unknownand may never be known. Almost certainly,he will turn out to be a rabid anti-Commu-nist. a militant right-wing extremist whomall good liberals condemn.Yet it would be a grevious error to viewwhat happened as the isolated act of onepathetic nut. Martin Luther King was killedby one man, yet his assissination could nothave taken place except in a country whichhad legitimized white racism and permittedviolence against all those who struggledagainst it.Dick Flacks was known to the Chicagocommunity as a vocal supporter of the sit-in and the campus left. The assault on himcould not have taken place except in asociety where there is an increasing repres¬sion against the left, where violence of alltypes against the left is being legitimized.It could not have occurred without the in¬creasingly harsh condemnation of campusradicals from respectable, “liberal” forces,from the ACLU to the University of Chi¬cago. It is questionable that it would havetaken place except in a university whichtreats radicals as left-wing, violence-pronefanatics to be suppressed and expelled.Who is responsible for the assault onDick Flacks?• Charles Huggins, Nobel prize winner,who called the sit-in “Communist-inspired”and claimed it interfered with his cancerresearch.• Bruno Bettelheim, distinguished ser¬vice professor of educational psychology,whose diatribes against the new left, over¬flowing with words like “paranoid” and“neo-Nazi,” received wide publicity.• All those faculty members and admin¬istrators who repeatedly emphasized thecoercive nature of the sit-in without speak¬ing to the issues raised, who elevated onebroken window into the crime of the centu¬ry, who raised cries of “violence” against amost non-violent series of actions.• Edward Levi and the committee of thecouncil, not to mention the members of thedisciplinary committees, who, by engagingin severe political repression, gave thegreen light to a guy who wanted to kill DickFlacks simply because of what he said. Forlegalistic repression creates a climate inwhich illegal, violent, political repressionbecomes possible. If the respectable andpowerful figures in a society can punishpeople for their political attitudes, thenwhy can’t an ordinary citizen take uponhimself the same prerogative?Also to blame are all those students whocrossed picket lines at Cobb, who couldn’tbe bothered taking part in a struggleagainst disciplinary procedures and univer¬sity racism at the beginning of the quarter.All those apathetic, alienated students whofelt that whatever they did would be fruit¬less and hence didn’t do anything. Well, un¬derstand this, people: if the student bodyhad shown it would not stand for politicalrepression, there is a good chance that thecowardly sneak who struck down Flackswould not have dared to attack. A verygood chance.What is being challenged in this countryis the right of the left to exist. People whoare serious about working for social changeare expelled, are jailed, are assaulted, arekilled—the most recent example occurringlast Saturday, when a member of YoungLords Organization was killed by a cop.Despite whatever pious statements comefrom the administration building, despitethe $10,000 reward (after all, it is in Levi’sinterest to maintain a peaceful universitywhere repression is achieved in an orderly,quiet manner), it should be understood thatEdward Levi and Flacks’ assailant are dif¬ferent aspects of the same phenomenon.One is no more receptive to rational argu¬ment than the other, for how do you usepersuasion against an opponent who feelsyou have no right to exist? Collective actionand collective self-defense against the op¬pressor, whether the label he wears is “Minuteman,” “Birchite” or “President ofthe University,” is the only solution.The Black students at Cornell armedthemselves in fear of an incipient attack byarmed whites; after they showed they wereprepared to defend themselves, the attacknever occured. It may be necessary, soon¬er than I like to think, for the left to armitself also. The liberals will screech aboutleft-wing fanatics, Bettelheim will see hisparanoia theories vindicated, and EdwardLevi will intone: “Violence has no place ata Great University.”David C. BrownGraduate StudentDepartment of MathematicsA Letter to LeviEnclosed are a letter I wrote to Mr. Leviand the reply I received from Mr. (Henry)Field, (special assistant to the president).I thought you might be interested in thetype of response that interested and con¬cerned alumni are getting from the Uni¬versity administration.Bonnie Waitzkin, '68Dear Mr. Levi:As a 1968 graduate of the College, I amvery concerned with the recent treatmentby the administration of the student dem¬onstrators. From what I have read of theincident, and from what I have heard frommy friends still in the College, the protestsof the firing of Mrs. Dixon were entirelypeaceful. The manner in which these stu¬dents expressed their opinions would seemto require rational response from the ad¬ministration, not irrational mass ex¬pulsions.These students were exercising theirright of free speech and orderly dissent. Itis regrettable, but true, that those groupswhich have little or no power (such as stu¬dents and minority groups) must expresstheir opinions loudly and dramatically inorder to gain the attention of those who dohold decision-making power. Thus, to me,it is of little importance that the studentschose to sit-in rather than writing hun¬dreds of letters to you. What is importantis that they chose peaceful, non-destructivetechniques to express their views. And Ibelieve that any university administrationwhich responds to such techniques withsevere punishment is suppressing freedomof speech. Your response to the studentswill have a profound effect on the students’future lives, in this society which is so con¬cerned with academic credentials.I sincerely hope that you will reconsideryour decision to expel the students. Ex¬pulsion is a severe and cruel punishmentfor students who in fact were expressingtheir own deep concern and involvement intheir university’s affairs. The University ofChicago cannot afford to lose these stu¬dents who have shown sincere interest inthe quality of their education.Mrs. Bonnie WaitzkinThe University’s reply follows:Dear Mrs. Waitzkin:President Levi has referred your letterof April 10 to me for response.You may consider a 16-day “capture” ofthe Administration Building, and the ac¬companying harassment of professors andothers in their classes and offices (in¬cluding the false imprisonment of one pro¬fessor in his office for two hours), “freespeech,” but it sure isn’t free listening.One recent cost sheet showed a cash lossof $250,000 as a result of the occupation,and this disregards the more severe non¬economic costs to the institution which thisform of disruption engenders. That sure is“loud and dramatic” speech. Anybody elsewant to join the “discussion?” How long dothey get to keep “talking*”*Apparently, you believe that it is the vol¬ume, not the content, of speech that makesfor communication. Or, at least this is sowhere “the powerless” are concerned.Then no holds are barred. A university isnot in all respects a democracy. Not whenit comes to faculty retention. Or, at least, I, as a recent graduate, do not believe thisUniversity should be so. There we perhapshave an issue. Informed exchange of opin¬ion where relevant — and it is very rele¬vant — yes. How long should this Univer¬sity bleed while you stand “talking?”Henry FieldSpecial Assistantto the PresidentEmployeesFor three months this summer most ofthe employees in the Pierce, Woodward,and Burton-Judson cafeterias will be laidoff. No severence pay has been mentioned,contrary to the stipulations of the contract.Employees have been asked to come tothe personnel office for an interview in anapparent attempt to find jobs for some ofthem in other areas of the University, butnothing definite can be hoped for orplanned on. Most employees have been leftup in the air.This institution has often been accused oftreating its employees, especially its non-academic staff, in a very cavalier manner.Well, here’s a real example. The Universitymust be forced at the very least to live upto its legal obligations. However, there arelarger questions. Doesn’t the Universityhave a moral obligation to provide employ¬ment for its workers for the full year?What will these people do for these threemonths? They will surely find it difficult ifnot impossible to find jobs.I would hope students, particularly thosein the aforementioned residence halls, will support the efforts of these workers to gainbetter treatment from the University.Toni Reed, '69The UC 'Bit'The following is an open letter to dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell!, written by astudent accepted to the Class of ’73 in re¬sponse to a circular sent out by O’Connellto all students accepted for admission bythe University.As a candidate recently admitted to thegraduate school of the University of Chi¬cago, I received your circular on the Uni¬versity’s policy concerning disruptive ac¬tions. I am moved to reply.I am reminded, in the circular, of theUniversity’s tolerance of the right of dis¬sent. However, the circular reveals an in¬clination on the part of the University topermit dissent only so far as it does notinfluence the University. This is hardly aconcession at all, except to the collectiveconscience of the University community. Inshort, the circular implies that a studentmay object to the policies of the Universitybut he will not be allowed to affect thesepolicies.You might argue that the student, bypeaceful petitions and other lowkey tactics,may bring his views to the attention of theUniversity administration, which mightthen take some action consonant with thestudent’s perspective. But this is hardlysubstantive. The student knows that he hasno real power.See "Letter," Page NineRichard Flacks And TenureBy Steve CookIronic as it may seem, the same day that Richard Flacks was so viciously attackedin his office, a committee was to meet to decide his tenure in sociology. That meetingwas called off and is tentatively rescheduled for next Monday.Flacks’ tenure decision was not due until next year. However, he has received anoffer from the University of California at Santa Barbara and has asked for histenure to be looked at now so that he can respond to the California offer.Two committees are meeting on Flacks’ tenure. One is made up of professors inthe College social sciences division, appointed by master Arcadius Kahan. The othercommitteeis made up of all tenured faculty in the graduate department of Sociology,headed by department chairman chairman Morris Janowitz.The recommendations of the committees will be forwarded to Dean D. GaleJohnson, who will make the final decision on tenure.The Maroon has been unable to learn the position of any committee members.Kahan flatly refused to release the names of the members of the College committee,and members of the sociology department said they did not feel free to comment atthis time.In the absence of responsible faculty comment, speculation is all that is possibleon this crucial issue. Several alternatives are open to the committee.With their subject lying in the hospital, the committee members are faced with amost difficult decision. If both committees refuse to rehire Flacks, the administrationof this University will have more angry students on its hands than Marlene everdreamed of. Needless to say, many people would feel Flacks’ colleagues picked amost unpolitic time to stick a knife in his back.If both committees keep Flacks, all will be forgiven and forgotten. He willprobably turn down the California offer and stay here, a token radical but a radicalnonetheless. And Morris Janowitz will continue to feel his acid tongue indefinitely. SDSand NUC will keep a foothold in the University and the prospect of future sit-ins isthat much improved.One possible result is that Flacks will be kept in the College and released from thegraduate school. If that happens, he might go to California anyway. Student reactionwould be hard to predict; Janowitz would certainly not make any friends in themoderate and leftist ranks of students. Flacks has done most of his work in theCollege anyway, and it is in the College that he has ammassed a considerable studentfollowing.The committees could wait until Flacks is fairly well recovered and emotion overthe issue is not so high. The way it looks now, that will not be until the summer.By then, with students on vacation, the committees would be free of fear ofdisruptive protest. And Santa Barbara told the Maroon it can wait for Flacks’ decisionuntil the opening of their fall semester in September.Despite the apparent political wisdom of delaying the decision, Janowitz said lastnight: “The sociology department is doing everything it can to respond to his (Flacks’)request.”And although both the committees have been delayed for about a week, there hasbeen no official change by Johnson of the May 12 date for the announcement of hisdecision. A member of the Sociology committee said that they expect to make theirdecision within two weeks. In any case, it seems now that Flacks’ tenure status will bemade public by the end of the quarter.The fact that he has been reappointed before (this is his fifth year here) and thathe stands much better academically than Marlene Dixon make his chances fortenure in the College look very good.I can only hope that Sociology decides likewise. He is certainly worth two Marlenesto the Movement and to the University. If Flacks goes, the Movement will have onelast hurrah, and, after that, will probably follow him West.Steve Cook is a second year student and a Maroon staff member.May 9, 1969/The Chicago Maropn '7j'1—8/TheChicagoMaroon/May9,1969^^MiDWAY CHFX/POIFTNOMONEYDOWN!WU^LI LOWGMACTERMS!6522S,COnAGEGROVE 55th&STATE CALL:Ml3-3500OUR49thRECORD-BREAKINGYEAR! BUYNOW!BUYWITHCONFIDENCE!CallRalphBierwirthoroneofhisassociatesbetween9AM&6 PM,7daysaweek,andhewillsendanewChevytoyourdoorto takeyoutoMidwayChevroletifyoupresentthisadtothedriver. Or,showthisadafteryourneworusedcardealisclosed,andif youdon'thaveatrade-in,Ralphwilldeductyourcabfarefromthe purchaseprice. ThisofferappliestoanyneworusedcarsoldtoaMaroonreader byMidwayChevroletbeforeJune10,1969.=•mJ/)-ofs.? a? 3S=r^£-3S°f3:£LS2.5 2.-7*§F </»*•* a.isu11Oc"3n2■a_a o2.3.^re3s;r-^23aX-o^ S3*eEL3.'■d2o£3-33-a°a .o~< 'oSow ^39-oo_-<j Q.—J™s:n^&CC".v"<O'3 c/i-•cc°<5=■® CVBBBCL^$9^ >'5H*2ilaround and about the midwaySalary IncreaseClerical employees at the University willreceive a six per cent salary increase, ef¬fective July 1 announced Gilbert Lee, Vice-President for business and finance.The pay raise will affect 1,600 full-timeand 350 part-time employees. These in¬creases will be in addition to the annualmerit increases which almost all employeesreceive during the year.‘ This adjustment will maintain the Uni¬versity’s clerical salary rates in a strongaverage position in the Chicago labor mar¬ket." said Fred Bjorling, director of per¬sonnel.“We feel that our salary schedules, plusbenefits and the other advantages in work¬ing on the University campus combine tomake employment at the University of Chi¬cago very attractive,” he added.Lab School TuitionTuition at the lab schools will be in¬creased beginning in September. Increasesfor the academic year range from $125 to$250 depending on the grade level.The increases are: nursery school, $675 to$800: kindergarten, $675 to $800; grades 1 to4, $1100 to $1300; grades 5 to 8, $1200 to$1400; and grades 9 to 16, $1350 to $1600.“More money is needed for teachers’ sal¬aries if the laboratory schools are to re¬main competitive with other good schoolsin attracting teachers,” said Francis V.Lloyd, director of the lab schools. Gilbert Lee, who announced the increase,said “To keep pace with rising costs, thelaboratory schools’ tuition must be raised.Not to do so would inevitably result in thedecline of quality in the laboratory school.”Math WhizStuart N. Lerwick, a third-year student inthe College, has received a prize for hisperformance on a nationwide general math¬ematics examination held in November.Lerwick was among the top five studentsin the competition sponsored by the Societyof Actuaries, Chicago. David TravisPsychosis in BloodNew evidence has been found that certainacute psychotic states — especially schiz¬ophrenia — may be associated with chem¬ical disturbances in the body.Dr. Herbert Meltzer, assistant professorof psychiatry, presented his evidence be¬fore the American Psychiatric AssociationWednesday, May 7.Meltzer reported an increase in activityof two enzymes in the blood of more than100 acutely-psychotic patients, in three sep¬arate studies. Nixon Foreign PolicyThree foreign policy experts, two fromUC, urged President Nixon to develop anew foreign policy for the United States on“The University of Chicago Round Table”Monday night, May 5 on WTTW-TV.Hans J. Morgenthau, professor of politi¬cal science and history; Phillipe Schmitter,assistant professor of political science; andErnest LeFever, senior fellow in foreignpolicy studies at Brookings Institute andforeign policy adviser to the then SenatorHubert Humphrey all agreed that thepresent foreign policy should be adapted totoday’s requirements rather than to thoseof 1946.“We need a new foreign policy for tworeasons,” Morgenthau said. “First, wehave lived in foreign policy on the capitalwhich was accumulated during the famous15 weeks of the spring of 1946 when thegroundwork for our new foreign policy waslaid in the form of the policy of contain¬ment, the Truman Doctrine and the Mar¬shall Plan.“The other reason lies in the enormouschanges which have occured throughout theworld in the last 20 years. What was goodand sound and rational in 1946 or 1947 or1948 is not necessarily any more rationaland sound and good today. We must createa new foreign policy adapted to the require¬ments of the new age,” he added.“GOI-FOR THE FURY,FORCE AND FUN OF lf_A movie so brilliant, so special thatit’s dangerous to write about lf_I’ll be talking about If_forever.’’-iooK“ANGRY, TOUGH AND FULLOF STING!”t, f“WILL PROBABLY BE THEBIGGEST MOVIE ON COLLEGECAMPUSES SINCE ‘THEGRADUATE’! ”-wtMGE voice“LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THAT.IS A MASTERPIECE,reason enough to rank Andersonamong cinema’s major artists.”-PMy8ov“THE MOST INTERESTINGFILM SO FAR THIS YEAR...A superb job... if.is a brilliantand disturbing film.” vogue“IF YOU’RE YOUNG, YOU'LLREALLY DIG ll-lf you'renot so young, it’s more reason thanever to go see what it’s all about!”—COSMOPOLITANPARAMOUNTPICTUREScesenisA MEMORIALENTERPRISES FILM....which »Mewill you he on?MALCOLM McOOWELl CHRISTINE NOONAN RICHARD WWWICK OAVID WOOOROBERT SWANN DSo SHERWIN LMOSAY ANOtRSON Km. 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What’s good forTurin Bicycle Coopis good forthe U.S.A.Cheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, Mercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; S&S 10 - 8Henry Ford rides a bicycleNEW LOCATION!UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREis now at 1150 E. 63rd(Betw. Woodlwn & Univ.)Complete Selection ofSweatshirts, rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equip¬ment, wash pants, sportshirts, pajamas, hikingshoes, sweat pants, etc.,etc., etc.UNIVERSALArmy Dept. StoreHY 3-1187 PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - 1 Going to be inChicagothis summer?You can take courses forcredit in the evening atThe University of ChicagoDowntown Center, in mostundergraduate fields, in¬cluding English, History,Humanities, Mathematics,Philosophy, Psychologyand Social Science.Summer Quarterstarts June 23 andends August 29Write for information to:The Universityof ChicagoExtension Division65 East South Water StreetChicago, 60601Call Financial 6-8300If er lOOO Years arc you one ofj-e who still use the uncomfortable,healthful old-fashioned closet Vter ten eeuturies of mistakesthet w ith the slant, is revolu-siDg the world. The onlyof construction that isally comlortabie, lualth-;leanly.)ure*sive physicians andn £ architects are pru-tlly interested and endorsero closets. Booklet T, illus-d. with full details, freequest.4/THe Chicago Maroon/May 9, 19*9II/ (Maroon Classified Ads)OBSCURITY BREEDS FAMILIARITYRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMA¬TION: phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3266. Two JBL D53 S12 speakers. Superbsound. $290, but will discuss. FA4-8200, rm. 643.FOTAA 10th rate Arts Festival or a 1strate University? Or a 1st rate ArtsFestival at a 10th rate University?Find out — participate in FOTA '69.CAMPING EQUIPMENTCamping equipment for RENT:Tents, sleeping bags, stoves, lan¬terns etc. Contact HICKORY ATExt. 2381 or 324-1499. SPIRIT album No. 2. Played twice— honest! $2.75 Larry, B-J 120.MOVING SALEDEMONSTRATORS — TRADESTV's, Recorders, Amplifiers, Tuners,Changers, Speakers. Everythingmust go. No Reasonable Offer Re¬fused. Schwarlz Bros. HiFi 1215 E.63 St. FA 4-8400.1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tires,call BU 8-9106 after 7 P.M.Must sell now — bed, crib, rug,cart, 2 tables, drapes 8. rods, chair,lamp, typewr. 363-8049.'66 Bridgestone 350cc very fast 2cycle/6 speed call Richard KeatingFI 6-6161 (days), 664-1433 (eves.).'61 Hillman (car) exc. run. condit.$180 538-1027.VW—BUG — EXC. COND. LOWMIL. HALF YEAR OLD. $1650.CALL FA 4-8200 apt. 386. Composer seeks lyricist — smart,appealing popular lyrics. 877-6403.Fun lov fern app Box IH Maroon.Woman student with two childrenneeds someone to live in for sum¬mer. Own room 8, board in ex¬change for babysitting. Children are4'/j 8, 2. Call 667-1719 if interested.APT FOR SALEDeluxe So. Shore Apt. 1 block fromlake 5Vi large rooms — 2 full baths— carpeting draperies — air condi¬tioners — ref. — stove. 752-8423. June 10-Aug. 28 LOVELY 4-roomcottage, furnished, garden, So. Shore$110 p. month plus ut. 324-5742.FOR RENTWHORESWANTEDTo buy or rent for summer, one-room air-conditioner. Call 363-3139evenings. THE WHORE CAMILLE: one moreperformance, before we're closed bythe cops. Hippy-dippies and gumdrops. Underground flics and improvtheatre. Hooker raped in the hotseat. Bring a chick. Tonight at 8:30,Reynolds Club South Lounge. FREEFROM FOTA.LOST PEOPLE FOR SALEBriefcase lost April 22. Olive, peb¬bled, contains imp. notes. Rew., noquestions. 324-2875.FOR SALE'62 FORD FAIRLANE, 289 C.I., 4spd., Hurst Close Ratio, Bkts.,Only $300 Area Code 815 838-1209Entire apartment furnishings avail¬able for immediate sale. Verycheap. Call 667-5726.Siamese ktn 10 wks seal pt femalelitter trnd $15, 643-7450.Piano, upright, beautiful cond. Call667-8413.66 VW excellent cond., sunroof,white $975, 374-5026 evenings.VW exc. cond., '69 engine, $700 734-6364 6:30 7:30 M, W, Th, F, S.Good used TVs reconditioned. $24.958, up. American Radio, 1300 E. 53rd53 Kimbark Plaza.Mercury 61 28,000 miles in fineshape. $400 call 447-6457.Sony 4 track stereo tape deck, 2Roberts microphones, headphones.Call 324-1426 evenings.66 Triumph 1200 convert, extras,best offer 363-0557 6-8 P.M.Honda 50, great, $90, 643-8210.VW 1963, needs new home, red, ex¬cellent condition $600 363-5579. Typing 45c pg. — 568-3056 eves.Authentic Chinese Cooking taught inlovely Chinese home. Tuition andmaterials $30. Begin May 19. Limit¬ed enrollment, 7 per class. 324-8070.May I do your typing? 363-1104.RIDE WANTEDNeed ride for personal belongings toToronto (as much or as little as youcan take) between now and June 15.Will pay Cal Ext. 3265 days or 324-9358 eves. 6 room apt available June. 6836 Pax¬ton. Rent $150 per month. Call 6842616 or 667-1679.Lg turn 3 rm apt Mid-June. $114.Couple/sing. 643-1820.FALL QUARTER SUBLET: cleanfurnished 6-rm apt. 1 block fromcampus. Stereo, books, yard, porch,and tree. Sept. 17—Dec. 31. 684-3839.How much for the tree alone?Furnished apartment. Sublet 7/1 woption to renew. 3 rooms; $130 mo.incl. utilities. 5330 Blackstone; call684-7508 after 10:30 P.M.3 b d r m , twnhse, Hyde Park,$180 mo. avail June/July. 538-1027.Avail. 7/1 lg. 3 rm. apt. in EastHyde Park $130 mo. Call 667-7590.Apt. available now. 4 rm 8, IVi rmeff. Call Bill Stoll DO 3-6200; SteveFA 4-0342.Sublet 6 rooms 3 bedrooms sunporch53 8, Wcodlawn $170 955-4682. June-Oct. 2 bedrms, 2 baths. Prefercouple or fern. grad, students 752-7669 after 6.Sublt 6V5 rm. apt. 5330 Kimbark —anytime 6/15-9/15 35 person mo.FA 4-9500 1516.Sublet lg 7 rm apt. June-Sept 58th 8,Kenwd. 324-7417.8-rm. apt. turn. nr. beach, rentnegotiable, 375-4897.Summer sublet: June-Sept. 4 bdrm.air-conditioned apt. for 4 or 5 57Dorchester 684-6846.June-Sept. 4 bdrm air-conditionedapt. for 4 or 5. 57 8< Dorchester 684-6846.Room for 2 or 3 in good, close, 7 rmapt. for summer. TV, Stereo, porch,fire, furn. 5724 Drexel $50. 955-1824dig it. Sublet 6/10-9/1 South Shore, 5rooms, one air-conditioned. Fullyfurnished with piano, books, paint¬ings. Beautiful courtyard. Nea.rcampus bus and 1C. $160 month.Call X2408 8:30-5:00 ; 493-9276 after 6.Running, Jumping, Standing Still -with "Spider" John Koerner andWillie Murphy - now on sole at theStudent Cp-op.Sum. apt., 3 bedrm. furn, 2 blks.campus. 100 mo., 643-8210.WANTED TO RENTWanted: 3-4 bdrm. Apt. nearcampus, beginning June or Sept.,Call Bob, FA 4-9500, rm 1704.Wanted: apt. in Hyde Park with ATLEAST 3 bedrooms $25 Reward. 7529580. anytime.PEOPLE WANTED"Teachers: curriculum planning andteam teaching in new experimentalschool on S. Side, ages 11-13. Call768-4542, or 374-3548.Part time at hospital in area. 4 daysa week. Approximately Vh to 3 hrs.a day as TV attendant no TV knowl¬edge necessary. Must be availablethis summer. Call Mr. Eastman 375-7544 after 4:30.Waiters 8, waitresses part or full¬time for summer. Court House Res¬taurant, 5211 South Harper.High-paying soft iob for human withcar. For summer or forever. MaxEvers at 329-0430.PROOFREADER Opening in Univer¬sity Office. Daily, M-F, 1—5 P.M.Just the thing for a student wife orhousewife. Call Personnel Ml 3-0800,Ext. 4444. The University is anequal opportunity employer. Wanted: to rent apt or house forcouple 8. pet for summer. WriteProf. Lewis, Box 1363, Alfred, N.Y.14802.SUMMER SUBLETSublet 6/20-9/25 3 rm apt. turn.$100, 5708 S. Maryland 3rd fl.2'/2 rm. apt., 1 block from Co-op 8<Harper Ct. Furnished, storagespace. $116 mo. Call 493-8032 orwrite Dave Kroot, 5345 S. Harper,Chic. 60615.Jun-Sept. sublet furn. 3 room apt. 24hrs. desk service 10 min walkcampus, 1 min to I.C. $136 month.363-4300, ext 610. 7-rm. (4bed) apartment, 55th 8. Ev¬er e 11, air-conditioned 6/22/69-9/16/69. X2845 or 643-6607.Summer sublet 6/15 to 9/15 54th 8,Ellis furnished pets OK. $110 mo.324-2487 eves.Sexy rooms — $115 to $170 for thewhole summer — kitchen facilities— 2 blocks from the Quads — callPL 2-9704, or come see for yourselfat 5555 S. Woodlawn — preferably6:30 to 7:30 weekday evenings.Furnished, 2 bdrm. sunroof, view ofpark 8, lake. South Shore Drive. 288-1699.Air-conditioned 3 rm apt furn. inclvibrating bed nr campus. Pref. cpIor grad stud, sublet 6/15-abt. 9/5Ml 3-0945 eves, or wknd.Sublet 21 June 20 Sept. 2Vi rms 53rd8. Kimbark 324-4390. 4 rm sum sublt 54th 8, Dorchester$135 Peter 752-9538 Joe 752-9575.Summer sublet — share 6V2 rm.appt. 40/mon. — fall opt. 636-2383.Option next year; $65, 2Vi rooms —Harper Court; 752 0452.Summer sublet, furnished, air-condi¬tioned new apartment — 3 girlsneeded. 1400 E. 57 St. Apt. 402 call643-3348.3'/2 rm. apt. block from lake — Julyto Sept. 493-8803.Drxl — 57th: 4rm $115, 684-7411.One bedrm apt. partly furnishedHyde Park, $100/mo 538-1027.Would you paya little something toget through your nextlanguage exam?At Berlitz, we have a secret device for getting you throughlanguage tests.It’s called a Berlitz instructor.He’s a man who’s gotten dozens of seemingly hopeless stu¬dents through dozens of seemingly impossible exams.He does it by first finding out just how hopeless you are, thenhe sits with you and virtually brainwashes you until you notonly speak the language. You understand.Of course, all this costs a dollar or two.But seeing it could make all the difference between makingit and flunking, it’s a small price to pay.Berlitz®Practical language lesson*There’s a Berlitz Language School near your college and near your home.See your phone book.10/The Chicago Maroon/May 9, 1969 2 need male grad for 3 bdrm an* 1block west of campus for sum Jnext yr. $55/mo. Hum - Soe c,stu pref. 684-7466.6 room, 3 bedroom apt., 53rd 8,Hyde Park, June 1 through Septem¬ber. Option for next year. Call 752-1356 evenings.3 room apartment, close to campus,rent reasonable but will negotiate.Call 955-7014.June 15-Sept. 1 (approx) large, 5rms, Maryland near 57th, cool, airy,fully furnished, reasonable rent, 667-7443.Lovely fully furn. 3 rm apt — idealfor married couple or 2 students;convenient Hyde Park location. HY3-9426, pref. 5-8.ROOMMATES WANTED2 male roommates for June-Sept. $45mo. One block from Campus 2884631. PERSONALSFOTA '69 — UnbelievableJoin the NSA Record ClubA breakthru in logic, a heuristicconcept of life, and many other concepts of an action philosophy — SCj.entology — every Fri. 7:30 PM tilAdmiss. FREE 840 W. Wrightwood24o8476.FOTA — gaiety, love, tun, ex¬citement, expression, spring, may-poles, happenings, mind-blowing ex¬periments, entertainment, art, evnnthe fifth P.Share 6 rm. apt. nr. Harper Ct. with2 men. June to Oct. with opt. fornext yr. 324-1768.2 students seek third roommate forsummer only — one block fromcampus — own room — call 288-'3946.Fern, private room in huge HydePk. apt, starting June, option on falllease. Call 493-0911.2 fern, grads to share 7 rm E. HydePk. apt June 1 — $60 call 363-6442dinnertime.Fern to share South Shore apt. ownroom. Grad Student Pref. X2965 or684-3915.Roommate wanted for fall, nearcampus. Own room, darkroom, call288-3862 evenings.Summer sublet w/opt. for next yr.Washer 8. dryer, dishwasher 6750Chappel (1 block East of Jeffrey)$55/mo. Dave, 493-8863.Female roomate to share with 2 oth¬ers, apt. at 55th 8. Univ. $58 mo.Available May on. 493-3896.Fern, roomate(s) wanted. June-Oct.Own rm. 752-7669 after 6.Mle rmt immed occ East HP alsonext year. Dick or Dave 493-6399.Fern to share 52 8, Dorch. Apt. midJul-Dec. $65 . 684-4377..Roommate (female) wanted forUniv. Apts. Dorchester 8. 57th —summer 8. next yr. Air-conditioned.Call Ml 3-0800 X3776 rm 306.52 Dorch rmmtes wanted, 4 Igebdrms 2 baths or will trade for 4-5rm if rent less $130 955-3790.3 male grad sfds to share 8 rm apt.near 51st $45 mo. sum-next yr.3247431 or 3244677 aft 7 P.M.Wanted fern. grad, student to roomwith same — summer and next year—- own room and bath 56th 8. Uni¬versity 324-5704.1 or 2 to share apt w/2 fern gradstudents summer 752-2331. May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkU of C Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines.Our neurotic “anti-Communismcomplex" gets a penetratinganalysis in this “hard-hittingreport [which] traces thehistory and growth of anti-Russian and anti-Chinesepolicies...and suggests moreintelligent alternative actionsfor the future.”*A Report Prepared for the PeaceEducation Division of the AmericanFriends Service Committee$4.50; paper, $1.50k HILL & WANG72 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10011Publishers' Weekly mmP ' w ■ 1,11Surprise! Sports news returns to theMaroon to remind folks that sit-ins, tent-ins. and vigils aren't the only athleticsavailable on the Midway. Here's a sum¬mary of spring quarter sports . . . andthere's more to come.By Steve CookThe UC tennis squad is hosting the Chi¬cago Invitational Intercollegiate TennisChampionship this weekend. VisitingTeams competing in the event include U. ofIllinois (Circle Campus), IIT, George Wil¬liams, Roosevelt, Elmhurst, and North¬eastern Illinois State. Tom McCroskeyheads the team for the Maroons he’s sevenand one this year).Seeding and drawing for the meet tookplace Friday morning. Play starts Fridayat 1:30 and Saturday at 9 am. Matches willbe played on the courts at 58th and Univer¬sity and on Ellis between 56th and 57th1 streets.TrackCoach Ted Haydon’s track team has runinto some bad luck this season. Never¬theless, Maroon defeats have been high¬lighted by some fine individual perform¬ances. Haydon won the javelin competitionagainst Northwestern, Lewis, and Bradley.Knaak won the pole vault against Wilson,Lewis, Northwestern, and fine perform¬ances by Maroon runners Peppard, Clark,Melby, and Klieber promise continued Ma¬roon track efforts.BaseballErrors and bad hitting have kept the Ma¬roon nine from victory four times already! this year. The team has lost to Concordia,U of Illinois Circle Campus), ChicagoState, (twice). Hitting well are Eric Furt-kamp, John Cullen, Rich Morra, and JimStankiewicz. Maroon pitching is the bright¬est part of the teams this year, with NormKatz, Morra, and John Tweed on themound.GolfOne stroke kept the Maroon golf teamfrom victory against Lake Forest last Tues¬ day. Paul Chambers scored a 76 with a 34on the first nine. In other matches, the Ma¬roons lost to Lake Forest, Valparaiso,North Central, and Wayne State. Pete Mun-dy and Chambers have been UC’s bestscorers.IntramuralsSocim-The Cobols beat Lochochamu 2-1 totake the divisional socim championship.Jay Richard and Pierre Gould scored forthe victors.In the College, Chamberlin beat Psi Up- silon 2-0 for a precedent-breaking victory.Ron Steele put in both goals for Chamber¬lin.Softball-The undergraduate leagues in theCollege House Division have been decided.Tufts North has done it again in the RedLeague, Vincent won it in the GreenLeague, and Meade came out ahead in theBlue League.The fraternities are tied between AlphaDelt and Psi U.The grad schools ended up with the Un¬ touchables ahead in the Green League, andthe Medical School in the Blue League. Other titles are as yet undecided.Golf-Flint I won the College House tour¬ney. Psi U won it for the fraternities withAlpha Delt second. Individual championwas Steve Barret of Thompson with a 78.Bowling-A record number of 130 bowlersare competing in this year’s spring classic.Tufts South and Psi U are the defendingchampions."Wisconsin“ Continued from Page 2Madisons Mifflin Residents UneasyDennis Sinclitico, a member of the stu¬dent legal defense committee, said thatonly two students are still in jail from theweekend disorders. The pair, whose bondwas set at $2,500 each, are charged withfirebombing a university building.He said that students and residents aredisturbed at what he called police inactionagainst local high school youths who haveattacked students and hippies.An ROTC parade was scheduled to startand end in the Mifflin area, only a fewblocks from campus, tomorrow. ROTCplans have been changed, however, andthe parade has been shifted to other areasof town.The campus Students for a DemocraticSociety, although supporting the Mifflinresidents, is miffed at the miniriots, ac¬cording to an SDS member. SDS had beenplanning to focus discontent against ROTCbut the military training group has becomea minor issue, he said.The issue behind the disturbances in thepredominantly-student Mifflin area go dee¬per than just a desire to hold a blockdance. John Kaplin, a young resident who worksat the student-owned grocery cooperativeon Mifflin St., said, “It has something todo with being able to run our own neigh¬borhood, being able to defend ourselvesThe University of Michigan Gamelan Or¬chestra will present a program of g&melanmusic of Java at 8.30 p.m. Saturday, May10, in The University of Chicago’s MandelHall, 1131 East 57th Street.The gamelan is an ensemble of approxi¬mately 50 bronze xylophones and gongscommonly played both in the villages andpalaces of Java. The University of Mich¬igan gamelan was acquired from Java in1967.The gamelan tradition represents thelargest orchestral tradition outside thewestern world. The performers will wearJavanese costumes and will follow the rit- against the police^ and having decent hous¬ing at reasonable prices.”City officials retort that the Mifflin areamust be treated just like the rest of thecity.ual customs of the gamelan tradition dur¬ing the program.The program will include ceremonial mu¬sic, music for gamelan and chorus, andmusic for the theater. Each number will bepreceded by a brief explanation.The concert, sponsored by the Depart¬ment of music and the Fine Arts Program,is part of a series of lectures and concerts,“Improvisation in Music: East and West.”Tickets for admission are priced at $2.50and $2.00 and may be purchased at the Con¬cert Office, 5835 South University Avenue,Chicago, 60637, Midway 3-0800, Extension2612..Game lean Music to be GivenBy U of Michigan OrchestraHEY! DOWN HERE! MORE CLASSIFIEDS!RITUALISM, n. A Dutch Garden ofGod where He may walk in rectili¬near freedom, keeping off the grass.There are four Baha'i Houses ofWorship in the world today: Kam-»Pa la, Uganda; Sydney, Australia;Frankfurt, Germany; and Wilmette,Illinois. Visit the one of your choicethis week-end, and remember thatthe beauty of the building is a visualrepresentation of the beauty of theteachings.[The UC Baha'i Fellowship meetsthis Monday, May 12, at l.l.T. Carsleave Ida Noyes at 7:00 — join us.See shit at the Gargoyle. 50c. Unclein "One Spy too Many" plus "TherMole People". May 14. .FOTA '69 — Unbelievable***Some Sound Advice***ADC 303A speakers again for onlyS'’77 Scott, Kenwood, Dyna, AR,^ive 15% to 25% MUSICRAFTcampus rep Bob Tabor 324-3005.WHPK-FM needs you? Perhaps. Ourrecruitment drive for next year isunderway. New members are wel¬come in each of our multitudinousdepartments. Come to the WHPKopen house next Tuesday thru Fri¬day, 3:30-5:30. A glamorous careermay be yours.Jazz doesn't always mean boredomand white and/or black noise. Mau-ilCe^clntyre Proves it Wed. 14 at^ *aa Noyes.Wake it over to Ahmad's — that'swhere it's at food and drink-wise.n 1889 after hearing a Javancgamelan at the Paris World Fiuaude Debussy invented mode1™0SIC- Whaf will you do? Sat 8:Mandel.Butterfield _ magic samMay 17tickets $2.50 Now On Sale in Mandel Hall Corridor.NO TICKETS SOLD AT DOORNO TICKETS SOLD AT DOORDon't miss the tables in Cobb todayfor contributions to three worthwhileJewish causes.Did anyone find my orange kitten onthe quads Tues? call BU 8-6610 rm2206.FOTA '69 — Unbelievable.It takes 8 minutes to complete aRE-CON questionnaire.MAJESTY: n. The state and title ofa king. Regarded with a iust con¬tempt by the Most Eminent GrandMasters, Grand Chancellors, GreatIncohonees, and Imperial Potentatesof the ancient and honorable ordersof republican America.FOTA '69 — UnbelievableClue: you've heard about it foryears — June 6 will be your chanceto See it — the funniest movie evermade (and wait 'til we reveal thetitle!) Doc Films.You Doc Films freaks are alreadyshowing the funniest movie evermade — "What's new Pussycat" —so what are you talking about?"Who dare inform him of the cor¬ruption of the times?" THE DUCH¬ESS OF MALFI.FLACKSA Word of Explanation: the abovead was paid for by a member of agroup of people here who were trying to cinvince the right people togrant tenure to Richard Flacks. Thiswas before Mr. Flacks' brutal beat¬ing. I lon't know whether tenure isof any importance at this point. AllI know is that Janowitz hates Flacksand didn't feel moved to make any comment to newsmen, nor to conveyhis department's condolences per¬sonally to Mrs. Flacks. All of whichis interdependently irrelevant, but Ihad to get it off my chest. — ksFOTA '69 — UnbelievableHelp awaken sleeping giant of U.S.mass media. Protest suppression ofSmothers Bros. Hour to CBS, FCC,Congressmen.Pre Med Club meeting Monday,May 12, 7:00 P.M. Billings M-137.With Mr. Joseph Ciethaml, Dean ofStudents, Pritzker School of Medi¬cine, on medical school admissionsand programs.Come hear Mr. Jack I. Fishbein,publisher of "The Chicago JewishSentinel" Sun. May 11th.Grad Student will buy your car inEurope for you this summer at hugesavings CTE program, shipping incl.Call 643-4413.20,000 lbs of musical Instrumentscan't fail to turn you on. Sat. 8:30Mandel.Really poor? 50c for two poor flicks.At the Blue Gargoyle, Wednesday,May 14. 8 P.M.Chuck Berry was an orgasm! Waittill you see Phil Ochs May 19!More New Music — MauriceMcIntyre Wed. 14.FOTA '69 — Unbelievable.Howard Miller made it in radio, youcan too. WHPK Open House nextTuesday thru Friday 3:30-5:30.Sweet old lady wishes to hear frommiddle sized student with grey-blueeyes answering to the initials R.B.— signed His MotherCAN'T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN— Come on, Mom, I waved to youfrom one of my latest TV appear¬ances, I think.FOTA '69 — Unbelievable."Whether we fall by ambition bloodor lust like diamonds we are cutwith our own dust." THE DUCHESSOF MALFI.Folk dance in the quads by the ten¬nis courts. Sunday May 11, 1-6 P.M.Dunav Tamburitza orch. In case ofrain dance will be at Ida Noyes.As near as your telephone (326-4422)as far as Expo. Marco Polo.Send in your RE-CON form today."THE STRUCTURE OF MORAL¬ITY: JUDAISM AND CHRISTIAN¬ITY". A talk at Hillel tonight byProf. Arthur Weintraub of the U of IChicago Circle Campus' PhilosophyDept. At 8:30.FOTA '69 — Unbelievable.BUTTERFIELD — MAGIC SAMMay 17 Tickets $2.50 Now On Sale atMandel Hall Corridor.NO TICKETS SOLD AT DOORNO TICKETS SOLD AT DOORIf you didn't hear him last quarter,Maurice McIntyre is a MONSTER.CHICAGO'S OWN SWINGERS CLUBSend $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 60654.FOTA '69 — UnbelievableThis may be your only chance tohear a live gamelan outside of Java.It's exciting, exotic, relevant! Sat.8:30 Mandel.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 Damn it! Tomorrow is May 10 —the date of The Tenth Annual SmyrdBall. So get your ass over to Wood¬ward Court at 8:00 and have somefun.WRITERS' WORKSHOP — PL2-8377.Join the NSA Record Club—33% to 79% discounts— select from all labels— never any obligationLifetime membership fee $2.00Application forms at dorms, bulletinboards, etc. uc/nsa.FOTA '69 — UnbelievableThe African Studies Ass'n. and Students for Israel present Mr. Jack I.Fishbein on "The Abandoned BlackJews of Ethiopia." Sun May 11th7:30 Hillel. Lecture and film.TENNIS ANYONE? Call Bob, 288-7164 early mng., late evng.Free — beautiful, lovable six weekold puppies — call 955-5035.FANTABULOUS DINEWOMEN-DANCEWOMENFREEWOMENMARCHWOMENSINGWOMEN.Where? Smyrd will March to the AdBuilding to Sing Out for Justice andFree Women. You will Dine andDance at Woodward Court Sat. May10, 8 P.M. NAT'L STUDENT ASSN. RECORDCLUBAll-label record savings — prices aslow as 99 cents with no minimumpurchase obligations. No automaticshipments. NSA Record Club givesyou unlimited choice of every avail¬able LP at rock-bottom prices —discounts to 79%.INCIDENT pN 62nd STREET: at 8P.M. Wed. evening, several shotswere fired from the apt. building at62nd & Kenwood. Within minutes,more than thirty patrol cars con¬verged at the scene. Every officerwas brandishing his weapon; severalhad shotguns and high-powered car¬bines, in addition to their service re¬volvers. At one point, the officersturned their weapons onto a crowdof bystanders, telling them "To getthe f— out of the way before weblow your mother-heads off." Thesniper was not located. A police un-dercoveer agent who had appearedfrom within the ranks of the bystan¬ders, was heard to tell a uniformedofficer that the sniper was probablythe same individual who had beenfiring on the 1C in recent days.He might have turned. He mighthave gone back inside the room toplead with her but the sun was onits way down and in the distancethere began a subtle rumble and heknew without stopping to think aboutit that it was coming his way.f* CARPET CITY t4 6740 STONY ISLAND 4 PUBLIC’ NOTICEBROWN'S SUZUKI4 324-7998 4 CHK AC.OLANDS LAKUI SISUZUKI 1)1 Al l RI Has what you need from a $10Jused 9x12 Rug, to a custom ANNOUNCES ITS ANNUALSPRING SALt▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants ^f & Mill returns at a fraction of the 1 1969 5(XT' $249▲original cost. 4 1969 200CC $4501969 500CC $795▼Decoration Colors and Qualities. * MANY USI IX. YT LI S 1 ROM▼Additional 10% Discount with this 1 S 95.004 Ad. ( COMPLETE PARTS &SERVICEt FREE DELIVERY ; FACILITIESMON 1 Rl 9 9Theses, term papers SAT & SUN 9 6RO 1 64546454 N. WESTERNTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp. BONUS \or/<MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED STUDENT DISCOUNT664-5858 ON PARTS & CYCLES866 No. Wabash Ave. WITH YOUR STUDENT I DMay 9, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11RememberMotheron SundayThink of us todaythe Bookstore58 Ih & Ellis Does it hurtto chill beer twice?Not that you’d want to. Some¬times it just happens . . . likeafter a picnic, or when youbring home a couple of cold6-paks and forget to put ’emin the refrigerator. Does re¬chilling goof up the taste orflatten the flavor?Relax. You don’t haveto worry.A reallygood beer likeBudweiser is justas good when you chill ittwice. We’re mighty glad aboutthat. We’d hate to think of allour effort going down the drain just because the temperaturhas its ups and downs.You can understand whwhen you consider all the extrtrouble and extra expense thago into brewing Bud®. For irstance, Budweiser is the onlbeer in America that’s Beeclwood Aged.So ... it’s absolutely okato chill beer twicEnough said. ((course, we ha1a lot more to s£about Budweiser. But wekeep it on ice for now.)Budweiser. is the King of Beer;(But you know that.)ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS * NEWARK • LOS ANGELES . TAMPA • HOUSTON * COLUMBUS*** \vv.vv>AVA^KkVAMA^t>AWK^rsu^>tt i;uwjnrHaxcgrzr.JLr.g.* ■rgy* • • .jTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number 21 May 9, 1969The Finery of the Fabulous FOTAIT’S BEEN A DREARY QUARTER for piano recitals.The biggest gun of all, Horowitz, failed to show up, whileGilels and Rubinstein produced pops of distinctly lowcaliber. John Cobb’s Monday evening concert in MandelHall, then, was especially welcome: far and away themost spectacular pianistics I’ve heard this year.Despite the current Ives renaissance, his First Sonatais hardly a household commodity. A masterpiece in thelong line of virtuoso-pieces-to-end-all-virtuoso-pieces, it isan atrocity of ferocity and velocity, guaranteed to bringout any flaws latent in the performer’s technique. Only aman with supreme — and justified — self-confidence canbring it off.Cobb nearly dismantled the piano in the process, butgiven the aim of such acrobatics — to leave the stunnedaudience unable to reconcile the torrent of sound theyhave just heard with the mere mortal sitting before them— then there can be no questipning its success.Interpretively, it was no less impressive. In the madlyfarcical passages (how often do you get to hear Cobb oncom?), he wisely resisted the temptation to overplay thehumor, and his nearly deadpan approach made it all themore comic. Yet the fireworks did not blind him to themore serious aspects of this complex work, which wereprobed with subtlety, but without sentimentality. All inall, as is seldom the case at UC these days, justice wasdone. The First Day of FOTA The first half of the concert was devoted to Schubert sB-Flat Major Sonata, and if it was less noteworthy thanthe Ives, the fault lies as much with the composer aswith the performer. Freed of the time limits imposed bythe song, Schubert's music tends to play the unwelcomeguest — like Delius, congenial at any given moment, butsomewhat insipid when poured out by the hour.• Cobb showed himself as comfortable in the tendernessof Schubert as in the savagery of Ives — in fact, hesounded like two different pianists, which is just as itshould be, although seldom is. Even at his quietest (andhis Schubert was quite subdued) he has an acute senseoi phrasing and dynamic variation. My only complaint,in fact, is that he was a little too Schubertian; a littlemore nervousness, even if it went against the grain ofthe music, might have made the piece sound less flabby.The concert was as sparsely attended as the averagePhy Sci lecture, probably due to the unfamiliarity of theartist’s name. In any case, if you missed this concert,don’t let it happen again: Cobb is too good to play to-anything but a full house. Peter RabinowitzFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 1969Schedule of EventsDATE PLACE EVENT TIMEMAY 9 Reynolds ClubS. LoungeCloister Club UNITY PLAYERS:The Whore CamilleModern Dance Recital GuestArtist - Gabrielle Gramattefrom Berlin 8:30 P.M.8:00 P.M.Bergman GalleriesMandel HallReynolds Club N. Lounge Light Show, RockBand, Paint-InLili Kraus - Piano Concert U. ofC. Chamber Music Series.Dept, of Music Adm. $4; U.C.Students $2 Tckts: 5835 Uni¬versity Ave.Reception for LiliKraus after herconcert 8:30 P.M.8:30 P.M.MAY 10 Stagg Field Cricket Match 11:30 A M.- 4th Floor CobbClassroomsCloister ClubMandel Hall Art Workshops:Clay and OilsPittsburgh Experimental The¬ater Group: COBBLEFLEXpresents: Cerebral SpermDept, of Music and The FineArts Program present: UNI¬VERSITY OF MICHIGANGAMELAN ORCHESTRA Adm.$2.50 and $2.00 (SO1 discountto UC faculty and students)Tckts: 5835 University Ave. 2 - 5 P.M.7:30 P.M.8:30 P.M.MAY 11 Hutchinson Court Pittsburgh Experimental 1:30 P.M.Campus andSidewalks Theater Group outdoorguerrilla theaterMain Quadrangle Folk Dancing:Serbian Folk Dance 1 - 5 P.M.OrchestraQuantrell Auditorium Movie: Bergman'sWild Strawberries andstudent film (free) 2:30 P.M.Quantrell Auditorium Movie: Bergman'sNaked Night andstudent film (Free) 7:30 P.M.iHutchinson Court OUTDOOR MULTI-COLORFOUNTAIN CONCERT —Los ConquistodoresLatin Band 8:30 P.M.MAY 12 Hutchinson Court Chalk-In 1:30 P.M.Reynolds ClubS. Lounge Dramatic Dialogues 1:30 P.M.or 3:30 P.M.Quantrell Aud. Movie: Bergman's 7:30 P.M. HYDE PARK Nowplaying:“A MILESTONE! A FINEACHIEVEMENT! —Judith CristTHE ACCLAIMED MOTION PICTURE-JohnCa«*avetes"FACESp| A>l < Al I -Mi l l M l Hi nnoMUNus «io«y t stiutotr iouowing iasi diguim iutuaiApril 11Peter Sellers Stanley Kubrick sDR STRANGEIOVEwf»»6VApril 12Robert MorseHOW TO SUCCEEDIN BUSINESSApril 18Steve McQueen Jamei CoburnTHE GREAT ESCAPEApril 19Alan Arkin Audrey HepburnWAIT UNTIL DARK April 25Gregory PeckTHE GUNS OF NAVARONEApril 26Maclaine lemmonIRMA LA DOUCETICKETS $1.50uftofluPIUS: FLASH GORDONAND THE CLAY PEOPLEEvery night a new chopter May 2Fellini'sJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITSwfiWsluMay 3Burton Taylor Mike Nich.WHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?May 9Alan Bates He Broca sKING OF HEARTSIMAGE THEATRE750 N. Clark St. 337-2113FIRST EXCLUSIVE CHICAGO SHOWINGOpen Wkdays 6:30 PM., Sat., Sun., Hoi. 1:30 P.M.Smiles of a SummerNight and studentfilm (Free)Sign up for A. Small Group Discussions - LACB. Student-Faculty Dinners - LACALAN BATES ("THE FIXER") IN PHILIPPE DeBROCA'SKING0F HEARTSIn Cinemascope And Color( Plus “An Oscar For Mr. Rossi”)SATURDAY, MAY 10, COBB, 7 & 9:30 PM, SI, CEFSTUDENTSSUMMER JOBHIRING THIS WEEK ONLYRequirements:Must have neat appearance,18 years of age or older. PublicrelationsCall: 892-6961 Aurora Of)WitziesZUerSlr“FLOW FRS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREETMORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST. The Carpet BarnA division of Cortland CarpetWe have an enormous selection ofnew and used wall-to-wall car-1petings, staircase runners, rem¬nants and area rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine and Americanorientals).We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9-3. ,1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)HU 6-1840 243-2771 Milos Forman’sFIREMENS BALL2/Grey City Journal/May 9, 1969The Sidekicks Are NowIN 1750, THE UPPER CLASSES OF THE VIRGINIACOLONY saw their first professional theater. Timeswere less than prosperous for William Hallam, an Eng¬lish actor-manager, so he organized a troupe to send tothe colonies, where there wasn’t any competition. Theoriginal repertory of Hallam’s “American Company” in¬cluded the familiar Hamlet.American theater is still depending on English exports.For the next three weeks, the English playwright TomStoppard will be displaying his theatrical wares at theShubert Theater in Rosencrantz and Guildenstem areDead, which played on Broadway last year. It is present¬ed by the David Merrick Arts Foundation by arrange¬ment with the National Theater of Great Britain.R and G is a play about a play; it is Hamlet seen fromthe perspective of two Shakespearean walk-ons. Rosen¬crantz (Brian Murray) and Giuldenstem (George Back-man) are tools of fate caught up in a world they try tounderstand.The 32-year-old playwright has said this about hisplay: “When people talk to me about this play, I feel likea smuggler’s dupe confronted by a customs officer. Icheerfully declare my responsibility for the play abouttwo specific individuals in a particular situation, andthen the fellow starts ransacking my luggage and com¬ing up with all manner of exotic contraband such as thenature of identity, of death, of God, and I have toadmit the stuff is there all right but I can’t rememberpacking it. In other words, a play isn’t the end productof an idea — the idea is the end product of a play.”There is something of quality for every taste in thisproduction — humor, pathos, wit, satire, an engagingplot, all interwoven with scenes from Hamlet. An effortis made by R and G to comprehend some problems oflife, death, identity, and even acting.The superb staging by Derek Goldby (only 25 yearsold) and the settings and costumes warranted a “Tony”award in 1968; the play also won the New York DramaCritics Circle award as the best play of the year for 1968.But there was a severe-gap between the witty-word-play on stage and the folks behind us. Their conversationwent like this: On expectation: “I thought it was goingto be a musical comedy, something like ‘AuntieMarne,’ ” Now there’s a good play, much better than‘Dolly.’ ” On comparison: “You know that Mort de Sod The StarsBrian Murray, Joann Rose and George Bookman inRosencrantz and Guildenstem”was one of those you had to read the playbill for too.”“You know that Hamlet went nuts.” “Yes, yes, every¬thing was death.” On R and G: “It aroused your curi-ousity, you can say that for it. I wonder what its about.I don’t know, maybe I’m stupid, but I can’t get it. Well,at least its a clean play. You can tell its a spoof miHamlet.” Positive comments on R & G: “Those kidssure had to learn a lot of lines, you got to give themcredit.” On English arts: “I’ve never seen an Englishmovie I’ve even enjoyed. There never is any punch inan English play.” on themselves: “If you wanna knowwho the clowns are, its the people in the audience whopaid the money.” Brian Murray and George Backman are summoned toElsinore to “glean what afflicts Hamlet” since they’rehis old school chums. On the way, they run into thePlayer, W. B. Brydon, who fills the stage with pizazz asthe head of an acting troupe belonging to “the school ofblood, love, and rhetoric — You needn’t take all at once,a combination is available, though all are bloody.”The Player says “Our existence is viable only if some¬one is watching. If you want a jingle, a single coin hasmusic in it.” This gusty band of performers enforces theaesthetic distance that has been set by the verbal joust¬ing begun by R and G. As the play continues, the effectof theater is so great that when Rosencrantz walks to thefront of the stage and screams “fire,” no one in theaudience flinches. In their presentation, there is no im¬mediacy, only theater. In their subject matter, there isuniversality, thus creating a theatricalist-realist syn¬thesis.The writing is consistently tangy and forceful. Somelines are worth repeating: “It’s plausible without beinginstinctive.” “I’m intrigued, not quite eniightened.” “Ac¬tors are the opposite of people.” “Relax, respond, don’tquestion your situation at every turn.” “Truth is thecurrency of living, nothing is behind it, but it’s taken asrespected.” “It’s silly to be depressed by death becauseyou don’t know when you’re dead.” “Death followed byeternity is the worst of both worlds.” “Language makesup in obscurity what it lacks in style.”R and G’s verbal ploys come across like music — therhythm of their presentation was exacting. Murray givesa virtuoso performance; his facial expressions, bodilyactions, intonations, and eye movements are performedwith competence and imagination; he is a real charac¬ter.Unfortunately, George Backman would be better castas some aloof prince in a romantic ballet. Technically,he is capable and will show surprise, horror, etc. But itis a surface style that comes across, an external styliza¬tion that is obvious; he does not portray a complex hu¬man being.One cannot adequately convey or recreate the totalawareness of theater that Stoppard provides us with inRosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. I know I’vebeen to the theater.Paula H. MeinetzBeef WellingtonDear Ian,Could you please tell me why the beautiful season ofspring follows the ugly season of winter? Sadie GrimilkinDear Sadie,This has been a matter of severe concern at all univer¬sities, of course, but particularly at UC, where a largepercentage of our income and expenditures are closelytied with agriculture. I have referred your question toEdward Rosenheim, spokesman of the Committee ofCouncil, and received the following reply:“With the approval of the Council, the Committee ofthe Council is appointing a sub-committee, charged withinvestigating the situation of seasonal variation and itseffects on the life of the mind and the mission of theUniversity. The sub-committee is requested to explorethese and similar areas, to formulate such problems astheir inquiry may disclose, and offer suggestions for theresolution of whatever questions may thus emerge. It ishoped that the sub-committee will submit its report toExciting ContestTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL in collaboration with theCollege Forum is initiating a stimulating thought provok¬ing contest. Tliink, if you will, about the sorts of urbanamenities that Hyde Park lacks. Is there a tobacconist?No. Is there a discotheque? No. Is there a Spanishor Latin American Restaurant? No. Is there any kindof good cheap restaurant? Are there artists and hip¬pies? Fountains? Pleasant Shopping Streets? Sit downice cream parlors? No. No. No. No. No. Well that’swhat the contest is about. It’s what can be done tomake 57th Street a nice place contest Entries neednot be elaborate. They can be lists, plans, drawings,essays, models, usw. The most original will bepresented in the Eighth Week GCJ appearing on thesame day as a star studded College Forum to discuss theproblem with experts and laymen. Everyone is invited tocontribute. If enough noise is made, maybe someone willlisten. Send or bring submissions to The Grey City Jour¬nal in Ida Noyes Hall or hand them to an editor.. if H - 5 - All’s WellWithWellingtonthe Committee of the Council no later than December 1,1969.“In the conduct of its investigation, the sub-committeeis authorized to retain professional staff assistance, fromwithin or without the University community, subject tothe approval of fiscal arrangements by the Dean of Fac¬ulties. To the extent that the sub-committee is concernedwith the problems of seasons as they pertain to students,it is likewise encouraged to appoint its own sub-com¬mittee, on which students will be included.”Dear Ian,I recently got an unsolicited “ballot” m the mail, ask¬ing me to participate in something called FSACCSL. Sus¬pecting some kind of fraud, I reported the incident to theBetter Business Bureau, but so far they haven’t respond¬ed. Could you please tell me what this group is and howI can get them to stop harassing me? John LeningradFSACCSL stands for Faculty Student Advisory Com¬mittee on Campus Student Life. Basically, it is an advi¬sory committee to Dean of Students Charles O’Connell,who also chairs its meetings; to make sure that thecommittee is fairly constituted, the faculty members areappointed by an impartial outsider (President Levi), andthe student members are elected. To ensure that thestudents are not presented with an “unfairly stacked”slate of candidates, the Dean of Students has the powerto decide what students are eligible to run.Like all University Committees which have student— members on them, FSACCSL has no “official” power —although this is of course unnecessary at a University,where the only power is the power of reason anyway.The great success of the first year of FSACCSL can beseen by the momentous improvements we have all wit¬nessed in student life.CMifidential to R.B.While there’s probably no law against it in the state ofIllinois, the dangers of disease are fairly high unless youcan find a competant veterinarian who can check yourocelot at regular intervals — preferably bi-weekly. Moreimportant, your ocelot might not find as much pleasurein the enterprise as you do — and an unhappy ocelot cando a fair amount of damage to both property and person.I’d suggest you forget the whole thing, but then again,I’m fairly conservative on that score.Ian Wellingtonmmm IjTHE GREY CITYJOURNALHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorMichael SorkinManaging EditorJessica SiegelStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.May 9, 1999/Grey City JonrnaI/3—A film from the director of KNIFE IN THE WATER and ROSEMARY'S BABY_Polanski’s REPULSIONwith CATHERINE DENEUVE / TONIGHT! 7:15 and 9:30 75(5 COBB DOC FILMFOTApreterit* A HappeningCHALK-INFree Pastels DistributedHutchinson Court Monday, May 12, AfternoonWILD! WILD! WILD! WILD! WILD! WILD!REVITALIZATION PRESENTSPHIL OCHSTickets $3.50, 3.00, 2.50. 50* discount for UC students &staff. Mail orders: Revitalization/Ochs, 1212 E. 59th st,Chicago 60637. Include stamped, addressed envelope.MANDEL HALLMAY 198:30 P.M. Tickets on sale at MandelHall Box Office beginning MondayThe Department of Music andThe Fine A rts ProgrampresentUNIVERSITY OF MICHIGANGAMELAN ORCHESTRASATURDAY 8:30 P.M.MAY 10 MANDEL HALLAdmission:$2.50and $2.00 (50e discount to LC faculty and students)Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 University Ave.; or at Mandel Hall on evening of concert.Now there is an addition in the Volvo family.We think you should see it... our new"6 cylinder Deluxe"May we invite you for a test drive?VOLVO SALES & SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1-3800We specialize in European delivery — call us Held over 4th MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCURE BLOOM1\ CHARLY nA . Student rate every\ 1 Kll day BUT Saturdaywith I.D. Card ..... i' iSunday, May 257:30 P.NLOPERA HOUSE$6.50 $5.50 $4.50 $3.50On Sale At Box OfficeMAIL ORDERENCLOSE — STAMPED, SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPEBox Office-20N.Wacker[EXCLUSIVELY ON 9 Warner Brothers Records IN PERSONcfetar, c?atiland cfflaryJflPVVVVVVVVVV'Pt CometOtorisl *£ 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *46 Phone: FA 4-1651 £* ******** **46 FOTApretenuA Mixed Media HappeningLight Show Rock BandPaint-InFree paint & brushes distributedBergman GalleryFriday, May 9, 8:30 P.M.Clark H3 enjoy ourspecial studentrate3,3,1f T timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow 3 a.m.• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 50clittle gal lery for galsonly• Clark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843 1st CHICAGO CONCERTAUDITORIUMFRIDAY, MAY 168:30 P.M.ONE PERFORMANCE ONLYTICKETS$6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50on sole at box officeco-host Jim Conway ShowMay 12-16Eitlutiv* Stonyan Record* ortut nttawd byWarner Bros ■ Sevan Art* Records. IncKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856 HY 3.8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd. Notice!The former Mod Hatter Res¬taurant will bo re-opening asTHE FAREASTKITCHENin 2 - 3 weeksFeaturing Cantonese & Americanfood, cocktails, carry-out servicetoo.53rd A Hyde Pork Blvd.ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL11 o’clockSunday, May 11,1969PreacherB. DAVIE NAPIERDean of the Chapel,Stanford UniversityPalo Alto, California“The Burningin the Midst”4/Grey City Journal/May 9, 1969FilmBoudu:The Battleof theBourgeoisieJEAN RENOIR IS THE GREAT HUMANIST of the ci¬nema and in his work he pays tribute to the greatness ofthe human spirit. Boudu Saved from Drowning (1932),one of his earliest sound films and one only recentlyreleased in this country, is being shown by Doc FilmsTuesday night at 8 in Soc Sci 122, and it is certainly oneof the three or four finest films to be shown on campusthis quarter.Boudu is set in a remote Left-Bank Paris of the early30’s, and yet in content it is strangely contemporaneous.Boudu is a tramp, one of those whom Shaw called the“undeserving poor”, only he would make Alfred Doolittleseem like an altar-boy. Not that he’s vicious, far from it,but he simply has no use for and no interest in anythingremotely approaching bourgeois values. Determined tocommit suicide, he jumps into the Seine only to be res¬cued selflessly by a do-gooder liberal bookseller. Bouduis painfully disappointed in the failure of his suicide, buthe gladly accepts when the bookseller invites him to stayat his home. Once there, however, Boudu is not properlygrateful. He drives away customers, wrecks the house,seduces the bookseller’s wife and finally marries his mis¬tress.This early prefiguration of the masochistic white liber¬al-black militant conflict is none the less charming andfunny for all its modern relevance. Renoir’s cameratransforms everything into a thing of beauty: the riv¬erside shops, the curious crowds, the cluttered bookshop.No formalist, he lets the naturalness of his charactersand setting free to work their spell on us. There are twokinds of immediacy in films: the kind where the filmpractically rushes off the screen to let you know it’sthere; and the kind, like Boudu, which goes its own wayand yet is so irresistible and independent that the au¬dience rises to meet it.Above all, however, Renoir creates characters that areengrossing by their very plausibility and humanity. Hischaracters are both flawed and virtuous, and Renoirdoesn’t engage in the usual way of creating supposedly“complex” characterizations, by keeping score as youadd up positive traits on one side and negative attributesl ultureArt, Acne andHeartache on the other. His characters are organic and their meritsand flaws derive from their characters, rather than theother way around. We sympathize with Boudu, but hedoes use the pages of Balzac to spit into. AT these traitsmakes Renoir’s world a delicate one, where Boudu, hair-cutted, married, and apparently tamed, can reach for awater lily and can in that one graceful, unpretentiousgesture erase an entire bourgeois existence.Boudu is played by Michel Simon, best known to UCaudiences from The Two of Us and Jean Vigo’sL’Atalante. Even in his 30’s, Simon was the incarnationof the dirty old man. His Boudu is anarchy personified;the screen in constantly filled with his preposterous re¬posing body, his dangling limbs, his pouting jowl. It’s anincredibly witty, lazy performance, delightful in its nose-thumbing at convention and exasperating in its total un-redeemability. The cast is uniformly fine, with CharlesGranval a standout as the bookseller and two deliciouslyFrench ladies, whose names I’ve forgotten.As one critic has pointed out, Boudu is a “shaggy manstory,” (although there is also a shaggy dog). Nothingreally happens in the plot, which is circular, and yeteverything happens within ourselves when we watch it.Even in 1932 Renoir was such a great filmmaker that heneeded no tricky effects and even the symbols of the film(most notably the river to which the action always re¬turns) are understated and never forced. Renoir nevercondemns any of his characters but shows us every sideof them so well that in the end, we, too, cannot condemnbut are moved by the beauty and complex variety of thecharacters. What Boudu does is to reinforce our faith inman, seeing him through the artist’s eyes as a veryfallible creature whose capacity for love and indepen¬dence make him eternally forgiveable.Following Boudu on the Doc Films program is TheLittle Match Girl, a silent fantasy adapted from theHans Christian Andersen fairy tale, starring Renoir’swife at the time, Catherine Hessling (whom everyoneremembers from her dazzling nervous performance inNana). It’s a rarely-shown classic (even more rarelythan Boudu) due to the general unavailability of prints,and its well worth staying to see.Myron MeiselJe we 11’IT’S ANOTHER WEEK. And now lemmings are the bestthing to put in your radiator if you’re worried aboutfreezing. I’m not worried about freezing. What I am wor¬ried about is acne. And not mine. You devoted readersknow whose. Ah, Jerusalem. Ah, Wilderness. Ah, Shit.Ah, Choo. Ah, Culture. This whole column is an elephant.You right, you right. And still they expectorate us tomovie. Hope us inclement to the theater. Antipodes ourfascination with music. And so . ..MoviesFRIREPULSIONSATKINGOFHEARTSSUNWILD-STRAWBERRIESTHEJEANETTEFRANKINBRIGA-DENAKEDNIGHTANDTHEBLACKPANTHERMON-BONDUSAVEDFROMDROWNINGTHESILENCEANDNOTHINGBUTAMANWEDSUOFCEXPERIMEN-TALSTHURSHULTHECONQUERINGHEROTHESE-VENTHSEALANDCOUNTRYANDTHATISENOUGH-PANTPANTPANTPNTPNTPNTAPANT.MusicThis evening, everybodies favorite Lili Krauss will playthe piano in Mandel Hall. Saturday night. THE AS¬TOUNDING UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GAMELIANCONCERT FEATURING 20,000 pounds of brass gongs isunmissable. And FY)TA, such goings on, we commend toyou every event a schedule there with or of to be foundherein elsewhere.TheaterNo duchess yet. Whore Camille Friday and the terrific,terrific Pittsburgh Experimental Theater Group on Sat¬urday. See also Fota, natch.ArtOpen your eyes, its all over. I happen to think that thosesticks in the mud are the neatest things I ever saw. Also,a big treat for all of you at the Renaissance Galleries. Areal treat. And the Museum of Contemporary Art alsomerits a plug for Franz Kline, and Moholy-Nagy. ThatsEarl, Pearl. Come select from our new collection of gypsy-look jewelryLome seieci irom out nrw ■> . 'Add verve, color and dash to any wardrobe. Hoop earrings,coin bracelets, belt chains and poison and snake rings. Allhandcrafted in wood, metal and precious stones. Now readyfor giving or getting.Prices start $2oo(Ms ttA &0U.S2International Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient HoursShop at home: Ask for our catalogue I,i—■ - ,n,it,t.s.tj.a,*■■■© VOLKSWAGEN Of AMERICA,Our story begins where other sedans end,As we go to press, nobody has found a use forthe rear deck of a conventional sedan, except ofcourse pigeons.Well, the Volkswagen Squareback doesn’t endin a rear deck.Instead, as you see, it ends in a square back—neatly grabbing an extra 14.5 cubic feet of lug¬gage space out of thin air.Then, for its next trick, the Squareback givesyou a 6.5-cubic-foot trunk up front where mostcars have their engines. And a rear seat that foldsdown to add another 17.7 cubic feet of space.With all this you can fit twice as much luggageinto the Squareback as any other sedan.And yet you don't need a big space to fit theSquareback into. It's shorter and narrower thanmost other sedans.So you can park it in places that other peopledidn’t even know wereplaces.How's thatfor a happyending?SOUTH IMPORTMOTORS AUTHORIZEDDEALERBU 8-49001511 E. 71st (West of Stony Island)Contact: George McClowry General ManagerTake the Illinois Central to Stony Island, walk acrossthe street to South Import Motors, and we willreimburse you for trainfare.Or, take a cab and South Import will pay thecabd river.Better yet, give George a call, and he will send aBeatle out to pick you up.Bring this ad along, and we will pay your way toSouth Import Motors.M. BERGFUR SHOPFur storage, cleaning and glazing Fullycovered by insuranceWe also clean leather goods and all generalcleaningSuede coats, jackets & gloves cleaned.1619 East 55th Street HY 3-9413May 9, 1969/Grey Cfcy Journal's-- —EXERCISEYOUR“WILE POWERI will switch to Tampax tampons,the internal sanitary protectionthat outsells all others combinedTI will ride a bike, swim, playtennis, dance.. . and do my dailyexercises every day of the monthif I wish.I will no longer worry about thediscomfort and inconvenienceof sanitary napkins, pins andbelts. BERLTTZ’SSUMMERSCHOOLSpend 4 weeks in Switzerland, Mexico or Germany.Learn the language in the mornings. Use it in the afternoons.I will be more relaxed andconfident in any situationbecause Tampax tampons can'tshow or cause odor.I will be completely comfortablebecause Tampax tampons can’tbe felt when they’re properly inplace. BerlitzDepartment L18866 3rd Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022l would like to learn□ French □ Spanish □ GermanPlease send details of live and learn programsand departure dates.NameAddressCity StaleN.Zip Phone NumberThis year Berlitz has a new idea.We call it our Live and Learn pro¬gram, and it’s a cross between sum¬mer school and a summer vacation.It works like this.We fly you abroad, put you up inexcellent hotels, give you 3 meals aday, arrange afternoon, evening andweekend trips, and generally makesure you have a good time.That’s the vacation part.In the mornings, however, weteach you the language.That’s the school part.But don’t be scared that our schoolis something like high school.At Berlitz, we virtually trick youinto learning with an artful blend of teaching and acting.The cost? As low as $735* toMexico, $895* to Switzerland, or$925* to Germany, airfare included.Now for the only snag.This is the first time Berlitz hasrun this program and unfortunatelywe can’t take too many people.However, this is also the first timewe’ve run this advertisement. So ifyou mail the coupon now you shouldbe able to get into the course youwant at the time you want.Send it and this year you couldcome back with something more thanthe usual souvenirsYou could come back with alanguage. In New York, call 581-5101 Or see your phone bookfor the Berlitz School near you.♦Based on departures from New York City.Berlitz®Practical language lessonsTAMPAX* TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY BYTAMPAX INCORPORATED. PALMER, MASS.FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY—WEEKLY—MONTHLYVWSAUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY IAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9*/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 JESSELSON'SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW's encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanics havejoined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease A oil change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 THE COMFORTABLE CHAIRCandles, Incense, Jewelery & nice things from nice places5 5 0 3 Vi Hyde Park Blvd6/orey City Journal/May 9, 1969fJF*,*, r* * ' r f yt> ’ <>> HOLLYWOOD, IN WHAT APPEARS TO BE A ratherdesperate struggle with an audience it no longer under¬stands, has founded a new gendre: the film about Youth.Youth is a mystical experience. Youth is a religion.Youth is the terrifying specter about to destroy our road¬ways and colleges. Youth is it. The trick to these pic¬tures seems to be to produce a picture with enoughsomething (usually naked young bodies) to attract thekids (that’s you and me buddy) while not being decisiveenough about anything to drive away the suburbanadults. (The lower class audience no longer seem to goto movies, it is believed. They watch television.) This ismore than merely repetitions of The Graduate, the filmwhich mixed its untruths so well that it made more mon¬ey than The Sound of Music. If one is to believe thepublicity campaign Romeo and Juliet is basically a storyof two kids in love; actually an Elizabethan foreview oftoday’s Situation. Phooey.The latest of these pictures (and the one that hassparked this belated piece) is Goodbye, Columbus, di¬rected by Larry Peerce (The Incident; One Potato, TwoPotatoes) from the story by Philip Roth. The picture inand of itself is really not worth a review (never mindyour time) but the issues it raises are indeed symptom¬atic with the current malaise which seems to havegripped most of the American cinema.Goodbye, Columbus looks like a two hour Salem com¬mercial accompanied by dialogue by Philip Roth. It isvery gratifying to this reviewer to discover that Roth’sdialogue when spoken turns out to sound as if it werewritten. It has neither the realism and spontaneity of thedialogue of Hammett or Chandler whose dialogue wasalso transferred almost intact in the film versions of theirnovels) or the non-realistic artistic speech of writers likeDjuna Barnes (who, if she is filmable, must be rewrittenalmost entirely). Roth comes out sounding like a manwho is trying to sound good. Like most people who con¬sciously try to sound clever most of the time he justturns out dull and strained.What the picture also does, and what links it so em¬phatically to the rest of this new genre, is to encompassabout a dozen half-truths. The trick is to get the au¬dience to laugh at something (“oh boy, that’s true —I’veseen that”) and then to leave things at that. The result(true in every character in the picture) is that we have acollection of archetypes. They lead empty lives not be¬cause of the Westchester in which they live, or becauseof the lack of honesty in their relations with otherpeople, or because of the colleges they attend, but ratherbecause nobody has given them any life to do anythingwith. The fault here is mainly, I think, one of directorialtaste rather than direct fault, since the same is truealmost always of Roth. Roth has become the perfectbest-selling novelist so it is not surprising that he shouldbe a prime mover for an audience gathering new movie.In an interview in the New York Times Mr. Peercementioned that he did not like the comparison that hasbeen made between this film and The Graduate. Theproblem is that the film in every way invites the com¬parison. Not so much because the hero seems to havethe same problems and because he complains in almostthe same language, but because the basic attitude ap¬pears to be the same. This is a Social picture, a film inwhich the characters are not just themselves but exam¬ples of Something Bigger. They are the malaise of a Columbus FindsA Two HourSalem CountryParticular Kind of Kid Today. (Never mind that Vietnamor Sit-in is not mentioned, it would only have made onedrop the “Particular Kid” and made this picture thatmuch worse.) 'Somebody should take anyone who wants to make afilm about Youth and sit them down in a screening roomand let them watch Rebel Without a Cause. NicholusRay’s picture is extremely honest and powerful not be¬cause it 1 ^s a Social Conscience or because it showsHigh School Kids yesterday but because it is a tragedyof people fixed exactly between midnight and dawn ineternity. Rebel transcends its immediate situation and asa result tells us far more about the situation itself. Arch¬ etypes are not effected by Society or anything else be¬cause they simply do not exist. Romeo and Juliet isgreat not because of Youth but because of Poetry.One last word. In another section of the interview Mr.Peerce mentioned that the degree of nudity was decidedupon so that the film would get an “R” rating and that“young people” would be able to have a chance to seethe picture. Regardless of what I think of the film’sworth, this was the most disturbing statement I haveheard in sometime. It is to me absolute proof that theJack Valenti’s self-policing code is in effect the mostpernicious kind of censorship, the kind that doesn’t evenlet an artist do something in the first place. The fact thatLarry Peerce had the integrity to want the film to beseen by a large audience speaks well for him, but hisintegrity has in fact been compromised by letting theCode make his decisions for him. If this practice contin¬ues (and recent Variety reports that the latest SamPeckinpah picture has sustained Code instructed cuts)then whatever integrity new Hollywood directors havebeen able to maintain after years of television will becompletely destroyed. And don’t believe the ads, kids,foreign films ain’t better than ever either.T. C. FoxMay 9, 1969/Grey City Journal/7©1969 Bristol-Myers Co.For guys who work night shiftsa pill for the day shiftNothing can kill a day like a hard night.Yet every campus has its nocturnal heroesdedicated to the art of playing it cool.If you're one of them, we’d like to offeryou a little food for thought.What we have in mind is NoDoz®. The pillthat helps you shift through the day shift.NoDoz has the strongest stimulant youcan buy without a prescription. And it's nothabit forming.With a couple of NoDoz,workers of the night can fightanother day.*tf rrrmr&T tne f? ??WHO CARES ABOUTSTUDENT OPINION?BUSINESSMEN DO.Three chief executive officers—TheGoodyear Tire & Rubber Company'sChairman, Russell DeYoung, TheDow Chemical Company'sPresident, H. D. Doan, andMotorola's Chairman. Robert W.Galvin—are responding to seriousquestions and viewpoints posed by students about business and itsrole in our changing society . . .and from their perspective as headsof major corporations areexchanging views through meansof a campus/corporate DialogueProgram on specific issues raisedby leading student spokesmen.Here, Mark Book span, an OhioState Chemistry major, who plansa medical career, is exploring issueswith Mr. DeYoung. In the course of the full DialogueProgram, David G. Clark, a Masterof Arts candidate at StanfordUniversity, also will explore issueswith Mr. DeYoung, as will DavidM. Butler, Electrical Engineering,Michigan State, and Stan Chess.Journalism, Cornell, with Mr. Doan;similarly, Arthur M. Klebanoff,Government. Yale, and ArnoldShelby. Latin American Studies,Tu/ane, with Mr. Galvin. These Dialogues will appear in thispublication, and other campusnewspapers across the country,throughout this academic year.Campus comments are invited, andshould be forwarded to Mr.DeYoung. Goodyear. Akron. Ohio;Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical,Midland, Michigan; or Mr. Galvin,Motorola. Franklin Park. Illinois,as appropriate.Dear Mr. DeYoung:There is evidence that we of themid-twentieth century areengaged in a social andeconomic revolution equal inmagnitude and in impact to theindustrial revolution of themid-eighteenth century.Instead of hand tools givingway to power-driven machines,though, man-run machines aregiving way to computer-runmachines. Many phases ofbusiness and industry whichonce depended exclusively onhuman effc't (e.g. accounting,quality control, purchaseordering, and even sales) arealready showing the intrusionof computers. Someday,machine-computer-computer-machine complexes mayeliminate most humanparticipation in industry.Such change will produceseveral significant results(they've already started!):1. The rapid decrease in needfor unskilled and semi-skilledlabor.2. The ever accelerating need toretrain personnel to movefrom obsolete jobs to newlycreated ones.3. The requirement thatthose frequent technologicalretraining periods be withfull pay (i.e. elimination of ajob should not produceunemployment).4. The need for economicstability with nearly 100% of ourlabor force employed. (Theneed for 3%-5% unemploymentis not directly evident.)5. The increasing emphasis onservice industries. Asproportionately more peopleare involved in research,teaching, counseling, etc.,our society will lose itsproduction-consumption basis.What are you, an Americanbusinessman, doing to avoidmassive social disorientation,such as was experienced innineteenth century England inthe wake of the industrialrevolution, as we shift to aservice-oriented society? Howwill the excluded millionsstart to feel and to become abenefiting part of the changingsociety?Yours truly,’VcU-flU,Mark BookspanPre-Med, Ohio State *yo-cLtn Mr. DeYoung:Machines arc in...People out... XeOMassive social disorientationDear Mr. Bookspan:The fear that human beings willbe made obsolete by machines,and the prospects of a resultingmassive social disorientation,has prompted cries of alarmsince the harnessing of steampower and the invention of themechanical loom.These traditional forebodingshave become increasingly vocalin some quarters with thecontinuously wider applicationsof automation. As the litanygoes: Automated machinescontrolled by computers areself-adjusting, repairing, andprogramming without humanlabor . . . can outperform anyworker at the task undertaken,and likely outthink him as well.Inevitably more and moreworkers will be replaced witheach progressivelysophisticated generation ofcomputer complexes, andunemployment will rise tocrisis proportions.Historically these fears haveproven groundless, and thereis no reasonable basis toconclude any catastrophicdevelopments in the future withincreased automation,#There is no end to the needs ofhuman beings as they havemore disposal income and moreleisure time. Withoutautomation, we would not havehad the capacity to fulfill thedemands of a constantlyincreasing standard of living.As a matter of fact, whileautomation does causedisplacement, it does not causesignificant unemployment.Quite to the contrary,automation has created morejobs than it has destroyed. Thedevelopment of the computeris a good example. Actually,there is greater employmentnow than would have been thecase if the technologicaladvances brought about byautomation had not occurred.This is illustrated by industry'sexperience during the ten-yearperiod ending in 1965. Approximately 58-millionadditional jobs were created,while some 50-million jobs wereeliminated, leaving a net gainof 8-million positions.Significantly, technology in alarge measure prompted thejob gain, but was not the majorcause of job losses. Rather thisresulted more from increasedwage rates occasioned bystatute and agreementsnegotiated with unions, and forthe most part affected unskilledjobs, as might be expected..The displacement, orredeployment, of workersresulting from automationcertainly is no cause for alarm.Quite frequently, people arereleased from lower-payingjobs and advance to better¬paying positions, all broughtabout by automation.Mostfirms applying newly availabletechnologies retrain and placetheir employees in newpositions, and invariablyexperience the need foradditional personnel as well.For the most part this means anupgrading of skills along withan increased income-earningpotential, and expandedemployment.Compare the significantincrease in the total work force of over 70-million, withaverage earnings of $2.50 perhour, to that of 63-million in1955 whose hourly earningsaveraged $2.00 (equivalent1965 dollars). In other words,wage rates and employmentboth rose during a decade thatwitnessed considerableautomated innovations.Aside from these bare-bonesstatistical facts, the impact ofautomation is measurable inother terms ; namely, theincreasing release of man fromdawn-to-dark drudgery.Through the utilization ofmachines in lieu of brute forceto increase productivity,significantly greater numbershave been able to shift toexciting new occupations thatmean for them larger incomesand fuller lives. A vast spectrumof new activities throughincreasing applications ofautomation is profoundlyaffecting our whole mode oflife. The future potential is asgreat as man's imaginativeintelligence can develop.Sincerely,Russell DeYoungChairman, The Goodyear Tire& Rubber Company/ KtPGre> City Jonrnal/May 9, IMS